8. Hockney Goes to the Movies

hockney.jpg

Where are we? In the movies. In the quick, cheap, hurly-burly silent comedies and melodramas made in L.A. between 1909 and 1929. In the light of L.A. . . . the dialectical light that the insensitive nitrate film stock required then. Lawrence Weschler, in a 1998 piece for the New Yorker about the light in L.A., quoting the painter David Hockney: “As a child, growing up in Bradford in the north of England, across the gothic gloom of those endless winters, I remember how my father used to take me along with him to see the Laurel and Hardy movies; and one of the things I noticed right away, long before I could even articulate it exactly, was how Stanley and Oliver, bundled in their winter overcoats, were casting these wonderfully strong, crisp shadows. We never got shadows of any sort in winter. And already I knew that someday I wanted to settle in a place with winter shadows like that. In fact years later, when I staged The Magic Flute, it’s that aspect of the story that I keyed onto - this journey from darkness toward the light, how the light pulls and pulls you. It certainly did me, anyway: the light and those strong, crisp shadows.” In a darkened English movie theater, the winter darkness outside, and Hockey sees a shadow of Los Angeles light or, perhaps, more an instance of preserved L.A. light, and he imagines himself here. As a boy and from time to time, he lived an hour or two in Los Angeles in a darkened theater, long before he arrived to live here as a young man, drawn by the light.

(The Flemish poet Paul van Ostaijen, writing in 1918 in Occupied City - “You will be forgiven much because you have seen many movies.”)

Sound changed that and the city changed (and you couldn’t set up a camera on a street corner, give the actors the rudiments of a scenario, and have them go at it in the everyday traffic of Colorado Boulevard).The movies had changed, and we changed and saw L.A. in a different light. William Faulkner, bitter about being in Hollywood (which he mistook for Los Angeles, which he mistook for L.A.) found the light ironic, perverse. From Golden Land, a short story from 1935 when Faulkner returned the second time (and then again and again until his death) to write for the movies and for money: “He emerged onto the terrace; the voices ceased. The sun, strained by the vague high soft almost nebulous haze, fell upon the terrace with a kind of treacherous unbrightness.” That’s daylight, but it’s noir already. It’s the light in Glendale turning to murderous night in Phyllis Dietrichson’s house in Double Indemnity. What had seemed clear in our light, had seemed particular, now seemed merely pitiless. The light that bears down on the clueless Jake Gittes in Chinatown, the film image slightly overexposed. We learned at the movies to distrust that light. We learned to distrust L.A.

The image associated with this post was taken by Flickr user Here in Van Nuys. It was used under Creative Commons license.

hoto by Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images

Leave a comment

SoCal Connected

About Where We Are

Where We Are is an ongoing examination of  LA's twinned identities as urban and suburban written by one of the area's great chroniclers, D.J. Waldie.

More KCET Local Blogs

404 City
Read Ophelia Chong's latest post, OCD: Savoring A Moment

Blur + Sharpen
Read Holly Willis's latest post, Coming Up: Lewis Klahr

Cakewalk
Read Erin Aubry Kaplan's latest post, You Got A Problem With That?

City of Angles
Read Brian Doherty's latest post, It's Charlie Beck for L.A. Police Chief

The Guest Room
Read Harry Pallenberg's latest post, Surviving Los Angeles

Movie Miento
Read Adolfo Guzman-Lopez's latest post, Watch

Pixeltown
Read Maxwell Strachan's latest post, The SoCal Spin 10/23

The Other Room
Read Kevin Ferguson's latest post, Ex-Wetlands
 
Think Tank LA
Read Jeremy Rosenberg's latest post, Yes Sushi,
No Sushi

See More Recent Blog Posts

Tell Us

Got something to say? Got an idea that would make a great local story, or want to share an article or blog post you find interesting? Tell us about it.

Send Feedback

E-Newsletter Signup

Get great content from KCET straight to your inbox. Sign up for our monthly e-mail featuring upcoming KCET programming, events, ticket giveaways and web-only highlights.

Signup Form

Show Your Support

Like what you see? Donate now to support local, intelligent, independent stories. We appreciate your support.

Donate