Perhaps one of P&PC's all-time favorite moments in TV history:
Showing posts with label rudyard kipling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rudyard kipling. Show all posts
Friday, October 10, 2014
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Assassins & Outsiders: The Obscurity of Popular Poetry

While the P&PC Office was aware of at least one more Cusack film that incorporates poetry, we didn't remember (not until Brian Spears pointed it out to us) all of the verse in the the other famous Cusack back-to-high-school flick, 1998's Grosse Pointe Blank, which was directed by George Armitage and co-stars Minnie Driver. In the film, Cusack plays Martin Q. Blank, a hired assassin who goes back to Michigan for his tenth high school reunion and falls in love with high school sweetheart Debi Newberry (Driver) all over again. There's kissing. There's lots of gunplay. And Martin and Debi reunite.

Martin: Hi Bob.
Bob: Debi Newberry, eh? You gonna hit that shit again?
Martin: Fine, Bob! How are you?
Bob: Real smart. C’mon, let’s see how smart you are with my foot up your ass.
Martin: Do you really believe that there is some stored up conflict that exists between us? There is no "us." "We" don’t exist. So who do you want to hit, man? It’s not me. [Martin adjusts Bob’s sport coat.] Now what do you want to do here, man?
[Bob shows him a crumpled piece of paper he's pulled out of his pocket]
Martin: I don’t know what that is.
Bob [slurring]: These are my words.
Martin: It’s a poem?
[Bob nods]
Martin: See, that’s the prop. Express yourself, Bob. Go for it.
Bob [reading]: When I feel quiet, / When I feel blue…."
Martin: You know, I think that is terrific, what you have right there. Really, I like that a lot. I wouldn’t sell the dealership or anything, but I’m telling you, it’s intense.
Bob: There’s more.
Martin: Okay. Would you mind—just skip to the end?
Bob: The very end…[reading] "... For a while."
Martin: Whoa. That’s good, man.
Bob: "For a while."

Bob: Wanna do some blow?
Martin: No. I don’t.
[They hug.]
Martin: There you go.
Bob: I missed you.
Martin: Okay, I missed you too. Okay.
It's a hilarious scene made even more hilarious by the next in which Martin literally wields the power of the pen, not poetry, to kill a fellow assassin in an adjacent hallway.

Hi I’m Debi Newberry. This is WGPM FM Grosse Pointe, "Window on the Pointe." You heard from Massive Attack, Public Enemy, Morphine (my personal favorite), and Dwayne Eddie’s twangy guitar. Good to hear Toots and the Maytells, huh? And as you know, this weekend is Pointe High Class of '86 reunion. So in honor of this momentous event, I’m making this an all-80s, all vinyl weekend. Stay tuned to "Window on the Pointe" and I’ll keep you posted on all this reunion-related nonsense. Hey, I know everybody’s coming back to take stock of their lives. You know what I say? Leave your livestock alone. Kick back and relax and ponder this:
Where are all the good men dead? In the heart or in the head?
So here’s “Another Cold Cup of Coffee” from The Clash.




Johnny: Golly that was sure pretty, huh?
Ponyboy: Yeah.
Johnny: It’s like the mist is what’s pretty, you know? All gold and silver.
Ponyboy: Um-hum.
Johnny: Too bad it can’t stay like that all the time.
Ponyboy: Nothing gold can stay
Johnny: Huh?
Ponyboy:
Nature’s first green is gold,Johnny: Where’d you learn that? That’s what I meant!
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
Ponyboy: Robert Frost wrote it. I always remembered it because I never quite knew what he meant by it.

Ponyboy: Yeah. I don’t think I could ever tell Steve [Tom Cruise] or Two-Bit [Emilio Estevez] or even Dally [Matt Dillon] about the clouds, the sunset. Just you and Sodapop [Rob Lowe]. Maybe Cherry Valance [Diane Lane].
Johnny: Guess we’re different, huh?
Ponyboy: Shoot, kid. Maybe they are.
Johnny: You’re right.
Johnny—who gets fatally burned while saving a group of children from the church as it burns down and then spends the rest of the movie in the hospital—chews on the Frost verse for the rest of the film, trying to figure it out. It's almost as if the mystery itself has the power to keep him alive, since he lives longer than anyone expects. And, when he dies, his last words (in a letter he's written to Ponyboy and placed inside a copy of Gone with the Wind) are about that poem. Here's that letter:
Pony Boy,
I asked the nurse to give you this book so you could finish it. It was worth saving those little kids. Their lives are worth more than mine. They have more to live for. Tell Dally I think it’s worth it. I’m gonna miss you guys. I been thinking about it. In that poem, that guy that wrote it, he meant you’re gold when you’re a kid. Like green. When you’re a kid, everything’s new. Dawn. Like the way you dig sunsets, Pony, that’s gold. Keep it that way—it’s a good way to be. I want you to ask Dally to look at one. I don’t think he’s ever seen a sunset. There’s still lots of good in the world. Tell Dally. I don’t think he knows.
Your buddy,
Johnny.
P&PC recommends you check out The Outsiders if you haven't seen it lately. Where else can you find Matt Dillon, Ralph Macchio, Tom Cruise, Rob Lowe, Patrick Swayze, Diane Lane, Emilio Estevez and Robert Frost's poetry all in the same movie? It's—what else?—a mystery how it ever happened.
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