(***You can also read "Cream" at www.megazine.xxx alongside original movie poster artwork by the fabulous, lovely, and extraordinarily-talented Ebecho!***)
When a famous writer wants to write an
exquisite porn story -- a story with no other purpose but to get
people off -- all they must do to protect their career is to use a
pseudonym.
When a famous director wants to make an
exquisite porn movie -- a movie with no other purpose but to get
people off -- their task is much more difficult. Making a movie
requires substantial resources, and the artistic flourishes that
separate a good director from a clumsy hack instantly mark the film
as coming from the hand of a master. Additionally, so many people
must be involved that the secret is nearly impossible to keep.
Even if no one tattles, it doesn’t
require sophisticated forensics to determine the creator of an
anonymous film: the telltale obsessions of the visual artist reveal
everything.
Famous directors solve this problem by
never showing the pornography that they make to anyone. If they are
compelled to make something particularly stunning, they only show it
to each other.
I learned about the process from my
sister, the famous actress. I won’t tell you her name, but you can
probably figure it out from context.
I hadn’t seen my sister since she
went out to California to “get so famous she needed a bodyguard for
her boyfriend,” but here she was outside of my damp, reeking Queens
apartment, “forgiving me” for ignoring her for years, saying how
she understood that I needed to do things my own way instead of
shamelessly mooching off her celebrity fortune like the rest of our
family.
“Just say you need my help,” I
said. "Just say the words and you can come inside and tell me
all about it.”
I wasn’t jealous. I avoided her
movies because watching them made me embarrassed for her.
I shared parts of her face. I shared
the line of her nose and the curve of her cheekbones. When I tried
to watch one of her movies, it felt like it was me who was being
merciless squeezed into desiccated pulp by the relentlessly-vapid
Hollywood shit machine, twisted and wrenched dry for my life juices.
Because I knew her better than anybody,
I was aware of the sheer despair in her eyes, especially when she was
doing comedy. On the screen -- in her eyes -- I could tell she was
barely holding on to the last animal remnants of her bartered soul.
“You are my sister,” she said.
“And I love you.”
“We both know why you are here,"
I seethed through the crack in the door. "You are drowning again
and everyone is laughing at you, aren't they?"
When I was twelve and she was fifteen,
E______ was pushed into the deep end of the public swimming pool by
this guy she liked named Kurt Danner. It was his birthday party.
All of her supposed friends watched and laughed as she struggled,
drowning. They thought she was trying to be funny. Kurt Danner
laughed the loudest of all, mocking the way she drowned by pretending
to choke on a piece of his birthday cake.
I hadn’t been invited to the party,
but our Dad said I had to go anyway because he had to work and he
didn’t want me to stay home alone. I didn’t even want to be
there.
The only joy I got from the experience
was seeing that my attendance pissed E_______ off so much. I sat in
the shade of the pump-house, stewing, watching everyone interact with
each other and noting the way that these tan, slender children
tortured each other to aggrandize themselves, knowing they would
never grow out of it, knowing they would only get better and sneakier
at it.
However, I was the only one at the
party who knew that E________ couldn’t swim.
I was the only one who knew how deathly
afraid she was of deep water, and how much she had to steel herself
even to come near the water’s edge where Kurt Danner reclined in
his lawn chair.
Without thinking, I leaped into the
pool and dragged her to safety. She clung to me so hard that I had
bruises for weeks. She held onto me, shivering, until she realized
who I was.
She never forgave me for saving her
life.
“I should have let you drown,” I
said later, after listening to a solid hour of her ungrateful
theatrics.
“He would have saved me,” she said.
“I knew exactly what I was doing. I can’t believe I brought you
along. I’m never bringing you anywhere again.”
“He would have stood there eating
cake until you swallowed a gallon of water and went brain dead,” I
said.
“Don’t ever try to help me. You
don’t know as much as you think you do. You are just a little girl
from Tennessee. I live in the whole world.”
Three years later, E_____ got her first
starring role in a shitty television show. It wasn’t long before
she graduated to shitty movies. Over the years, she offered me more
free money than most people earn honestly in their entire lives. I
didn’t take a single dime.
She went West and I went East.
On Christmas and on my birthday, I sent
back the titles to automobiles and the deeds to beach houses. When
my medical bills were mysteriously paid, I argued with the hospital
to get the bills reinstated, claiming a breach of my privacy rights.
The other members of our family weren’t
so spiteful, but they also didn’t have the same history with
E______ that I did. Her success ensured that our father and our
little brother didn’t have to work. I was glad for them.
But I would rather starve to death than
take money from E_______ and her little world. I wasn’t going to
help E_______ justify her own self-destruction by taking money from
her and from the commercial film industry that I loathed.
“It doesn’t cost me anything to say
it,” she said, leaning against my doorjamb, putting one hand inside
my home. “I’ll say it if you need to hear it. There is no one
else I can go to.”
“And?”
She swallowed.
“And I need your help.”
I opened the door for her, allowing her
to cross the threshold into my apartment. I tried not to notice how
she looked both ways along the hallway, making sure that no “normal
people” saw her go into such a normal, disgusting place. She took
off her baseball cap and sunglasses and sat down in the easy chair
that I had rescued from the garbage. I sat down across from her on
my coffee table, a footlocker with a blanket over it, the only other
piece of furniture in my den.
I got out the bottle of vodka that was
always in the freezer and I set it between us.
“You are still with Marcher &
Mandrake,” she said, rolling her eyes around my empty apartment.
“Did I get that right? That’s the name of your agency?”
“Yes,” I said.
“Have you sold any novels lately?”
“No,” I said. “Why are you here?
Did you get burned on some bad coke? Is somebody holding your rat
terrier hostage? Don’t you have billionaire friends out there in
California who can help you with your problem? ”
“I am coming to you because you are
the only person I can trust,” she said quietly.
I put my hand on her knee.
“That would be so sad,” I said, “if
I believed you.”
“I don’t trust you because I think
you care about me,” she said without losing her cool. “I trust
you because I know you have too much pride to hurt me.”
I opened the bottle of vodka and drank
a slug straight from the neck. I offered it to her. Fuck glasses.
Was she too good to drink straight from the bottle?
She sighed.
“Also, you are smart,” she said.
“Do you know how furious it makes me to say it out loud? I need
help and you are smart and you can help me.”
I shook the bottle of vodka at her
until she took it from me.
“So tell me what’s wrong,” I
said. “Remember: details are food for smart people.”
“It started with my publicist,” she
said. “She said that if I didn’t win an Academy Award in the
next five years, then my career would disappear when I got my first
wrinkle. The world wants to fuck me, not listen to me, she said. I
decided that it was time to do something dangerous. Do you know
Frank Fry?”
“I don’t know any of your movie
people,” I seethed. “I don’t want to know them.”
“He is European,” said E_________.
“Maybe Norwegian? Anyway, it doesn’t matter. He has never made
an American film before. He is a deaf-mute. He can’t hear and he
can’t speak.”
“And he’s the one who wants to
listen to you and not fuck you?” I said.
“He is also a genius film savant.
When I auditioned for the part, he put his head to my chest and he
listened to my heart beat while he showed me a video of a baby being
born. When the video was over, he left the room, and I didn’t find
out that I got the part until a week later.”
“Of course you got the part,” I
said. “You are E______ H______. He rubbed his face all over your
tits and you didn’t even flinch. That’s good acting.”
“He has this helper guy, this guy
named Whistle,” said my sister. “Whistle does all his business
for him and he also translates for him. Whistle knows Scandinavian
sign language or whatever. Whistle is hideous. He was in some kind
of a fire and he burned off most of his face, so he always looks like
he’s smiling. He wears these fantastic blonde wigs made with real
human hair. His skin looks like a leather purse.”
“Sounds charming,” I said.
“Anyway, Frank Fry wants to make an
American film. The project is called “Symphony for Signs and
Flesh.” It is supposed to be a metaphysical horror movie. You
know: high art. The premise is that after this scientist’s wife is
horrifically burned in a fire, the scientist develops this method
where people can change their skin. They can change their features
and skin color using little robots that chew up their hair follicles
and rearrange their cells. At first, she changes back to her old
skin, but then she wants more, and she starts acquiring the faces of
celebrities and so on. That’s my role in the movie. The
scientist’s wife desperately wants to be me, E________ H_______ the
actress, and so she makes her face look like mine and pretends to be
me, seducing neighborhood boys and ruining my reputation. Anyway,
you get the idea. Lots of long, still shots of people gazing into
mirrors with ambient animal noises and the sound of a crackling
fire.”
“Naturally,” I said.
“We started filming six months ago.
The entire project has been like some cult. I can’t say no to
Frank. Frank is the devil. He has some uncanny power over me. I
will do whatever he wants.”
“A silent Scandinavian svengali and
his fire-obsessed attaché,” I muttered. My mind wandered, trying
to imagine them.
“The other actors and actresses
working on “Symphony” were not Hollywood types like me. Frank
found people from the streets by doing open casting in Amsterdam and
Paris. The movie was in English, but I was the only native English
speaker. That was part of Frank’s power. There was no one else I
could talk to. He started making strange demands for scenes that
weren’t in the script.”
“What kinds of scenes?” I asked.
“I thought it was just going to be a
normal art movie,” she said. “But it seemed like every day we
did more sex stuff.”
“Sex stuff?”
“Yes,” said E_______, timidly. “My
agent told me how good the project would be for my career and how it
would help me get more serious work. She said I needed to make
people think about me differently. But all Frank Fry wanted to shoot
were sex scenes. I don’t think I’ve ever done so many sex scenes
for all my other movies combined. And it wasn’t just me: all the
extras and no-names were doing hardcore sex scenes with Frank and
Whistle every day. We had all these prop faces, you know, since the
whole movie is about changing skin. Everyone was changing faces all
the time, and Frank had a whole team of people who were using digital
effects to change the way people looked.”
“And none of this stuff was in the
script?”
“No,” said E_______. “That’s
the thing. We would be making the movie, following the script, and
then all of a sudden we would stop everything, get out the prop
skins, and start doing sex scenes with Frank and Whistle in this one
room with this giant golden bed.”
I stared at her. She looked at me,
searching for sympathy. Instead, I shut my eyes and sighed.
“I got this horrible feeling in the
pit of my stomach,” said E________. “I left the set and went to
London. My agent and I went to Frank and we demanded to see the
movie that was going to be released with my name on it. He showed us
“Symphony.” But there wasn’t any sex in it at all. It was all
blood and gore. All the scenes we had been shooting for the past six
months, all the face-changing orgies, were gone. I was confused. My
agent made him sign papers saying that he would use the cut without
the sex. I refused to do any more work on the project. I talked to
some of the other actors and actresses involved in the project, and
they were also relieved that the orgies weren’t going to be
included in the movie. Everyone praised the director for his vision,
and for his decision to sacrifice the shocking material for the sake
of the story.”
“I bet deaf-mutes get praised for
their vision all the time,” I said.
“But I wasn’t happy at all,” said
E________. “I wanted to know what he was going to do with the
scenes he shot. Was he going to watch them? Was he going to show
them to his friends? I couldn’t eat. I couldn’t sleep. I went
to him, furious, and demanded that he destroy the footage. But he
just sat there, smiling, pretending he couldn’t understand me.
Whistle translated, but he still wouldn’t talk to me. I got mad.
I wanted to murder him.”
She took a long swallow of vodka, and
then sighed, hanging her head.
She stared at the ground. Her fingers
twitched on the neck of the bottle.
“Did you?” I asked.
“Did I what?”
“Did you murder him? Is that what
this is about?”
“No,” she said. “I didn’t even
raise my voice. But I thought about it. Very hard.”
“I see,” I said. “And so here we
are.”
“I want that footage back,” she
said, her eyes blazing. “He convinced me to do things that I never
would have done if there hadn’t been a camera rolling. He made
this psychological space where it was okay to do the things he said.
I thought he was going to turn the sex scenes into a great film. But
he is cutting them and keeping them for himself. Why?”
“You signed a contract,” I
suggested. “So did he.”
“Those scenes don’t belong to him,”
she said. “I want to know what he is going to do with them. I
want to know why he spent so much time making us fuck each other if
he wasn’t going to show anybody. Maybe another actress wouldn’t
care. But all that footage could end up on the internet. And then
it would look like I did it in secret. Like I enjoyed it. Like
doing porn was my hobby.”
“I can’t help you,” I said. “You
did what you did. This isn’t a problem. This is paranoia and
vanity.”
“He’s here in New York,” said
E________. “We are supposed to do interviews and talk shows to
promote the film. When Frank Fry does interviews, he smiles like an
idiot and then acts out little mime scenes. Sometimes he draws
pictures on a little chalkboard. Everybody thinks it’s adorable.”
“And you have to sit next to him,
restrained and demure, as part of your contract,” I said, imagining
the scene.
“Will you please just go talk to
him?” she begged. “Why isn’t this making you angry? This is
exactly the sort of thing that makes you angry.”
I sipped my vodka, watching her squirm,
agreeing to nothing.
***
Hotel Panopticon was once the top four
floors of a Bowery tenement, but it had been renovated into a low-key
facsimile of a Southern-style bed and breakfast, trimmed with cheap
frilly curtains, throw pillows, banker’s lamps, red velvet, and
lacquered wood.
According to E________, whenever Frank
Fry came to New York City, he always holed up at Hotel Panopticon.
Hotel Panopticon’s real gimmick is
that all the rooms have cameras and all the rooms have closed-circuit
television displays of every other room. It is the perfect place for
voyeurs and exhibitionists to mingle. Or rather: it is the perfect
place for voyeurs and exhibitionists to never meet each other at all
and yet perfectly achieve mutual satisfaction of complementary
obsessions.
I didn’t bother with the concierge.
E________ finagled Frank Fry’s room number from the film’s
publicist, and so I went straight up.
I knocked on the door. When no one
answered, I tried the knob and found that it was open. I slipped
inside, unable to keep myself from baring my teeth in an involuntary
grimace at Hotel Panopticon’s silly opulence.
Most of the room was in shadow. There
was a man passed out on the floor, with his arms and legs spread out
so wide that he looked like he was leaping from an airplane. Another
man was standing in front of the wall of televisions, watching the
hotel’s guests with his hands on his hips.
He stood there until I tapped him on
the shoulder. He turned around. I recognized him at once as Frank
Fry, which meant that the man passed out on the floor was his
assistant, Whistle. When the man saw who I was, he blinked at me,
confused.
He couldn’t speak and he couldn’t
hear. I tried mouthing “hello” at him.
Though I am stringy, mean, and manly,
my sister and I have almost the same exact features. We are not
twins, but our mother’s heritage was so strong -- and my father’s
so bland -- that it is like our faces were machine-stamped into soft
wax.
Frank Fry stared at me, squinting, and
stepped over to his assistant. Frank Fry started kicking Whistle in
the ribs.
At first, Whistle didn’t move. Frank
kept prodding him. Whistle curled up around Frank Fry’s foot.
Finally, Whistle peeled himself from the ground and stood up,
blinking and rubbing the leathery skin of his ruined face.
Whistle’s nose and eyelids were new
skin that had been grafted onto his face, probably from his nether
regions, but the rest of him was red and smooth from his scalp to his
Adam’s apple. His mouth had the permanent sneer of a fresh skull.
I sneered back at him, unable to help
myself.
Whistle retrieved his blonde wig from
the ground and pressed it to his scalp. The fresh hair made him look
much jauntier, but no less disturbing.
Frank Fry signed something to Whistle,
and Whistle nodded.
“Who? Might you be?” Whistle
rasped. “You are new. To us. And we don’t. Know you.”
He looked at Frank Fry. Frank Fry
smiled.
“We would. Like. To know you,”
said Whistle.
Whistle seemed to have only enough air
in his lungs for a few words at a time.
“I’m E_______ H______’s spunky
little sister, obviously,” I said. “I’m here to thwart your
evil plan.”
Frank Fry and Whistle exchanged
glances.
“Which evil plan? Might that be?”
asked Whistle. “We. Have many.”
He gestured to an ottoman across the
room. I walked past it and sat down in the hotel room’s sprawling
leather recliner.
Whistle sat down on the ottoman and
Frank Fry sat on the edge of the four-poster bed.
“You are going to try and blackmail
her,” I said. “You hypnotized her into doing sex scenes and now
you are going to release them on the internet if she doesn’t give
you money, right?”
Whistle translated this to Frank Fry.
Frank Fry smiled.
“No one. Had a gun. To her head.
During those scenes,” said Whistle. “She. Enjoyed them. We
have. Documentation. Proving that. Everything. Was legal.”
“I’m not going to let you hurt her
reputation,” I said. “Whether I like it or not, her reputation
is also my reputation. Not socially, mind you, but certainly
spiritually.”
“There is no,” said Whistle. “Evil
plan. We are. Artists. All. The footage. Was necessary. For
art.”
While Whistle spoke, Frank Fry peered
at my face, scrutinizing me. I stared back at him, making owl eyes
to mock his unsettling attention.
“Listen,” I said. “I need a
guarantee that you aren’t going to try and ruin my sister’s
career. The truth is that my sister and I don’t even like each
other very much. What do you want from her? If what you want is
reasonable, then I don’t see any reason why she shouldn’t pay you
off. It was my sister’s fault for performing in your movie. But
now that the deed is done, obviously she is not the sort of actress
who could survive a sex scandal. She isn’t very talented.”
Frank Fry shook his head sadly.
“Sex. Scandal,” said Whistle.
“How. Boring. You have. A low opinion. Of filmmakers. We are.
Artists. What? Do you? Do?”
“I’m an agent,” I said.
“A film? Agent?”
“No,” I said. “A literary
agent.”
“Are you? Good?”
“The best,” I said. Why not?
Maybe I was the best. There is no way to gauge your talent in an
utterly dead industry.
Frank Fry considered this, tapping the
end of his nose with his index finger. He looked purposefully at
Whistle. Whistle shrugged, and when Frank looked away, Whistle
leaned close to me and drew me in conspiratorially, grabbing the
front of my t-shirt.
Whistle covered his mouth.
“I have. A novel. That Frank.
Doesn’t. Know about. It is about. Our time. Together.”
He let go of me and smiled knowingly.
“Listen,” I said. “I don’t
want to be here. Frankly, I hate movies. I hate the entire movie
industry. I think the whole world’s culture has been more deranged
by film than by any other human technology. For centuries, writers
were unlocking people’s imaginations with the power of the written
word, allowing people the freedom to invent without the fascism of
strong images or the charisma of childish actors populating their
dreams. For a brief period, we were free from the tyranny of beauty,
privilege, and power, since most of the world had beheaded their
kings and disgraced their nobles. Then movies came along and now we
are right back where we started. Instead of aristocrats, we have
celebrities. Instead of dictators, we have directors. The limited
narrative capacities of film actually make people dumber. While the
written word helps you climb down into depths that go on forever,
movies just get you off.”
Whistle and Frank Fry looked at each
other.
“We agree. With you.”
“No you don’t,” I said. “I
don’t think independent art movies are any better. I hate the very
idea of cinema. Independent movies steal the place that actual art
ought to have. Instead of being a massive waste of money, indie
movies are merely trivial. They are precious ornaments for people’s
masturbatory wunderkammers. I’d rather see a helicopter explode,
honestly.”
I walked across the room and pointed at
the bank of televisions, some of which were showing people fucking
their brains out in rooms exactly like the one we were in.
“There’s only one proper use for a
video camera, if you want my opinion, and that is to point it at
people having sex. Real sex. Real pleasure. Real exploitation.
Real self-indulgence and real gratification. If I want to connect
emotionally with another human being, I will go to the theater and
see a play. If I want to see new things from a unique perspective, I
will read a novel. The primal emotions that cinema provokes are the
same emotions as porn. Why can’t you people be honest about that?”
I took a deep breath.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “I am
crazy-ranting. I am here to do a deal, not lecture you.”
As I spoke, I noticed that Frank Fry
had become extraordinarily excited. He bounced up and down on the
edge of the bed. He reached out and touched Whistle’s knee.
Whistle sucked in spittle that had drifted down his chin, making the
red leather of his face shine.
“You understand,” he said. “You
see. It. You see. The lie. Don’t you?”
“What do you mean?” I asked, not
expecting to generate such excitement and sympathy from my invective.
“The whole thing,” said Whistle.
“Is a lie. Everyone. Who matters. Knows this.”
“Of course,” I said.
“No,” said Whistle. “It is.
REALLY. A lie. Movies make money. By being. Bad. But real.
Artists. Make. CREAM.”
“Cream?” I asked, confused.
“The movies. You hate. Are…” He
took a deep breath. “Milk.”
“Okay. Now you are crazy-ranting.”
“The work. The real. Work. Is the
cream. Of the milk. That no one sees. The secret movies. Are the
cream.”
“I don’t understand,” I said.
Whistle signed something to Frank Fry.
They spoke with their hands for awhile while I frowned at them,
waiting.
Frank Fry stood up and steered me over
to the bed. He invited me to take his place on the edge. I sat
down. He backed away from me and then he moved in close, holding his
hands up in a square and squinting through his fingers.
He looked at Whistle.
“Yes. She would be. Perfect. For
the ending. That we. Do not have,” said Whistle.
Frank Fry began furiously pacing
between the bed and video screens, looking at Whistle every now and
then with pregnant eyes. He fluttered his fingers in front of his
face and then stuck his finger in his cheek and popped it out, making
a champagne-cork noise.
“What do you mean about milk and
cream?” I asked. “Talk sense!”
“It is one of. The biggest.
Secrets. In the world. It is so big. That. No one believes it.”
“Tell me,” I said.
“I will tell you. But. You will not.
Believe me. You will. Laugh.”
“I am surprisingly open-minded,” I
said. I covered my mouth with my hand. “And I am also damned good
at selling first novels.”
Whistle looked at Frank Fry. He
nodded.
“Nobody. Really makes. Movies. The
good directors. The ones with. Talent. The ones with. Ambition.
Make cream.”
“What is cream?”
“Cream is. The distillation. Of a
film’s. Sexual essence. Cream is the reality. In the margins. Of
every shot. Cream is what. You really make. While you are.
Supposedly. Making. A Hollywood movie. For many movies. There is.
Often! A secret. Much shorter. Movie. This is. The real. Movie.
It is. Art. It is. Dangerous. It is. Unsellable. You divert. The
resources. From milk. To cream.”
“You are trying to tell me that all
these horseshit movies are part of some clandestine underground where
directors divert money to make secret masterworks?”
“Secret masterworks. That no one.
Sees. Because. They are illegal. They have not been. Approved.
By the studios.”
“You are right,” I said. “I
don’t believe you.”
“Cream began. As porn. Cream is
mainly. Still porn. But cream is. The best porn. Cream is the
essence. Of action. And image. Given unlimited. Budgets. And
unlimited. Social. Freedom. And access. To. The most malleable.
And beautiful. People. Actors and actresses. You can make.
Stunning. Narratives. With stunning. Special effects. With
professional. Soundtracks. With such visual. Strength. That all
other films. Are stunted. Garbage. But. These awful. Hollywood.
Films. Are how. We. Finance. And structure. Our cream.”
“You are telling me that for every
single shitty movie that gets made there is a secret porn movie made
from the scraps?”
“Not every. Movie. But. Many.
Movies. Some movies. Are just bad. It is. A sadness. The
Hollywood movie. Is the scraps. The cream is the. Reason. For the
project. ”
“I get it,” I said. “You are
making porn on the side while you are filming your stupid art movie
starring my sister.”
“And,” said Whistle. “Now. You
are here. Like an angel. To help us. Finish. When we need you.
Most.”
“What are you talking about?” I
said.
“There is a contest. In New York.
City. Every year. The greatest. Directors. Bring the cream. They
have made. This year. We have entered. This contest. We want. To
win. To enter. Bad cream. Is an embarrassment. Before. Your
peers. We know we. Can. Win. But our cream. Is lacking. Vital
shots. Of your sister. She became. Frightened. And would not.
Finish. Our project.”
“What are you talking about? There
is a contest?”
“A great contest. Every year. We
meet here. In. The city. The only city. The perpetual. City.
And here. We share. Our cream. What we have. Skimmed. From the
milk. Of the masses.”
I thought about this. Frank Fry
continued to pace, while Whistle sat with his hands on his knees.
Whistle stared at me, his lips forever burned backward into a tight
sneer. I wondered how he really felt.
“I came here for my sister,” I
said.
Whistle laughed.
“Yes,” he said. “But. Never
mind. About. Your sister. She. Is silly. And rich. She is. No
artist. She has. No vision. She has. No taste. She will be.
Fine. You are here. Now. For. Yourself.”
“Show me this movie,” I said. “Show
me the cream you made from “Symphony for Signs and Flesh.”
Whistle signed my request to Frank Fry.
Frank Fry threw his hands up in the air in disgust and stared at me
with malevolence.
“It is. Not finished.”
“I want to see it anyway,” I said.
Whistle bit his knuckle. He stared at
me, squinting, and then he signed my request once more to the great,
silent, Scandinavian director.
Frank Fry lowered his head, and twirled
a finger in the air toward Whistle.
“You may see. Our film,” said
Whistle. “He is. Not happy. But he. Respects. Your courage.
In coming. Here.”
Whistle walked over to the wall full of
video screens showing every room in the Hotel Panopticon. He opened
a laptop and plugged a grey cord into one of the screens, muttering
and swearing in his halting way. He typed a few commands and then
the entire bank of screens went white. I sat down on the edge of the
bed next to Frank Fry. There was a hissing noise, and then screens
showed a massive golden bed in the center of an emerald room. Each
screen showed a piece of the whole picture.
“We have been. Experimenting. With
multiple screens. For years,” said Whistle. “That is. Why. We
come. To this hotel. This film. Can only be watched. On twelve
screens.”
Music started to play. It was fast,
throbbing techno. Violin loops were mixed into the high registers.
“The cream,” said Whistle. “Does
not have. A different name. It is. Also. Called.”
He took a deep breath.
“Symphony. For signs! And flesh.”
He coughed.
“This is. Tradition. To name cream.
After. The original. Milk.”
The music stopped. There was a moment
of brown noise. One of the screens showed a door. The rest of the
screens focused on the golden bed.
My sister entered the room with a
severe expression on her face and her chin held high. She walked
across the room, wearing a red dress that swept to her feet, showing
skin in a line from her jaw to her navel.
My sister surveyed the room, intense
and unsmiling. The camera from one of the screens tracked her as she
took a position near the room’s single window. She climbed into
the windowsill, and light streamed out from behind her. She took a
baton from her pocket.
She was the conductor of this symphony.
The cameras tracked other people as
they streamed into the room. E________ pointed her baton at them,
and they spread around the bed. Each stood motionless an arms length
away. Men and women from every ethnicity were represented. There
were eleven of them. Twelve including E________. One for every sign
of the zodiac, perhaps. There was an astronaut, a priest, a
carpenter, a farmer, a business executive, a mother, a soldier, an
employee at a fast food restaurant (wearing a collared shirt and a
paper hat), a police officer, a baker, and a professor. Six men and
six women.
They were beautiful. Trim and fit,
nearly interchangeable, yet from all different parts of the world and
all walks of life.
“Most of our budget. For the. Whole
film. Was spent. On special effects. For this. Coordinated orgy.”
The music swelled. The music was a
glorious orchestra of machine noise, violins, and piano.
“We commissioned. The music. From
Germany.”
The men and women took off their
clothes as E_______ pointed the baton at them. They began to do as
the baton commanded.
Each camera focused on a different
angle of frenzied, orgiastic copulation. Twelve screens showed
twelve different angles, close-up and wide, shots of movement in and
out of bodies, penetration and release, violence and softness all
mixed up together, all expertly metered and tempered.
The baton directed and flesh obeyed. I
could not look away.
“A blowjob. Is the most.
Aggressive. Sex act. Don’t? You think? The hole. With teeth.
Hungers. The hole. Pounces. The target. Is paralyzed. With fear.
And pleasure. Competes. Against the fear. And wins.”
I was mesmerized. I had never seen sex
so beautiful. The bodies became a living kaleidoscope of color and
skin. This is what Catholics meant by communion.
Frank Fry and Whistle leaned toward the
screen. They both twisted the sheets of the bed in their hands.
Then things got really interesting.
“Now they will change faces,”
whispered Whistle. “They will exchange. Forms.”
On the twelve-screen orgy in front of
me, people started to switch faces and bodies. Skin shimmered and
melted like heat baking from asphalt. Faces leaped from man to woman
and from woman to man. The throbbing chorus of music, exultation,
and orgasm caused arms to switch places with legs. Faces sloughed
off like feathers from a bird and traveled around the room with each
flick of E______’s baton.
She stepped into the middle of the
melee, directing and dancing. Her red dress was ripped from her
shoulders. She threw her head back, licking her chops. Her famous
tits were as hard as rose thorns.
The golden bed became red, then bright
blue. The room melted into colors and pure information. Text.
Numbers. Silhouettes. Beats. Then people again.
Something was happening to my brain. I
felt myself screaming forward through time and space. On either side
of me, Frank Fry and Whistle were now watching my reaction to their
movie.
My whole body tingled. I wanted to put
my hands into my pants. I wondered if Frank Fry and Whistle were gay
and if it would be okay to touch myself. They seemed gay.
I could not look away. I could feel
their eyes on my cheeks. E________’s face filled the screen. It
was impossible not to touch myself. I gripped my own knees and
clenched my jaw.
The movie had fingers. My body was
wracked with pulsations of pleasure that submerged my will and made
me cry out.
The eleven performers lined up behind
E_______ on the screen. They were covered in sweat, blood, shit, and
come.
The screen went black.
“What?” I said. Standing. “That’s
it? She was going to say something.”
“We did not. Make. An ending.
Yet.”
“That can’t be all,” I said.
“You have to finish. It is beautiful. It is divine.”
“Yes. It is. A sadness. That. The
world. Only wants. Special effects. For violence. And death.
They. Do not want. Our cream. Sex. Is terrifying. To them.”
“You have to finish the movie,” I
said.
“We want,” said Whistle. “To
finish. We need. Your help.”
Frank Fry stood in front of me and put
his hands on my cheeks. He squeezed my face and held a hand to my
forehead so that he couldn’t see the color of my hair.
“What better ending,” said Whistle.
“Than the sister. Of our star. Saying the words. We wrote. For.
Her.”
Whistle joined Frank in peering into my
face.
“Real. Metamorphosis.”
I backed away from them, scrambling
away to crouch near the headboard.
“When you. Are intimate,” said
Whistle. “With. Another person. You. Exchange faces.”
He touched his own face. E______ was
right. It was as smooth and shiny as a handbag.
“We can wear. The leather. Of the
heart. Like a new face.”
Frank Fry reached out and put his hand
on Whistle’s shoulder sympathetically.
My mind was a mess. My own arousal
combined with the closeness of the room was making me panic.
“The contest,” said Whistle. “Is
tomorrow. The film. Must be. Finished. Tonight!”
I didn’t know what to do. I had come
here for one reason, but now I knew my sister was wrong. She had
never been involved in anything so brilliant in her life. I also
knew that she would never be able to see how brilliant this “cream”
was. These two psychotic perverts had made the best porn I had ever
seen using big budget Hollywood dollars.
E_______ would only see the perversion.
She would not see the truth of it. How could she? She had a face
that everyone wanted. She had no cravings. She had no desires she
couldn’t fulfill. There was nothing she desperately needed.
Or was there? Was there something she
wanted in this world that this cream could get for her?
Yes, there was. But she didn’t have
the eggs for it. She needed me, even if she didn’t know it.
I wondered what other “cream” I was
missing. I wondered what other secret, beautiful films were hidden
from me.
“I’ll do it,” I said. “I’ll
help you finish your movie. But only on the condition that you take
me with you to the contest. I want to be part of this movie. Not
just a mere actor.”
Whistle signed my demands to Frank Fry.
Frank Fry bowed to me, his eyes never
leaving mine. His eyes were suddenly wise and sad.
Though I knew she would see it as a
betrayal, I knew that finishing the “cream” would be the best
thing I could ever do for E______. Any casting agent that saw it
would know that she really was a formidable actress with impenetrable
depths. With the proper direction, her demonic intensity could be
turned into great performances. Her body had no boundaries.
The truth of the matter was that the
“cream” of “Symphony for Signs and Flesh” was the best acting
that E______ had ever done.
***
New York City has levels. It has
levels like a garbage dump has levels, but it also has levels like a
video game has levels. Activities that are trivial in other places
become impossible challenges here.
Level one is basic survival. This
takes place in the outer boroughs. The end boss is a teenage kid who
beats the shit out of you and takes everything but your pants. If
you can beat this kid, you get a Metrocard for the subway. Now you
can go “wherever you want.”
Level two is getting a job. This takes
place at street level. The end boss is a washed-up Broadway actor
who is now your floor manager at some restaurant where you wait
tables or wash dishes. If you manage not to kill this asshole, then
you win a paycheck.
Level three is finding a place to live.
This is more like a constant mini-game. Basically, you have to do
this every day.
Level four is surviving the drugs that
you must do in order to keep your soul alive. This takes place in
night clubs, in bars, and in run-down studio apartments. Alcohol is
the most basic opponent, but plenty of people prefer to challenge
heroin, cocaine, acid, or ecstasy. If you can survive the drugs,
congratulations! Now you have friends.
Level five is getting a sex partner.
The boss is also the prize. You lose if you ever say the word
“love.”
But the best part about New York City
are the bonus levels. These bonus levels are why people live here in
the first place.
In the city, even though you can’t
see it, there is magic happening around you all the time. Eventually
you get so you can smell it. It can make you crazy.
If you are lucky and brave, and if you
are accustomed to knocking down walls and going where you don’t
belong, sometimes you will stumble onto something amazing that you
could never see anywhere else in the world or at any other time in
human history. These are the bonus levels.
For instance, one time this author I
was representing got drunk and convinced me to go along with him to
this apartment on the Upper West Side and he wouldn’t tell me why.
I didn’t want to seem like a coward since I was trying to sell his
book, so I went.
All the furniture had been cleared out
of this apartment and the floors had been draped in white sheets.
The apartment was filled with fashion students.
“Model boxing,” he told me. “You
have to be a working male model to compete. Male models are very
competitive, you see. But they aren’t very good at boxing. They
are too worried about how they look. It is fun to watch them fight.
They do not take getting hit very well.”
Sure enough, the boxers were as ginger
with each other as cats batting yarn. They pawed each other’s
gloves from across the room while the fashion students giggled.
After being egged on by a mean drunk with a black eye who had been
brought along by one of the girls, one of the models accidentally
landed a sharp blow to the other’s cheek. The model that got
punched went ape-shit, pounding his opponent in the back of the head
as his opponent fell to his knees and covered his face.
The models had to be separated by
willowy dark-haired girls wearing massive fashion glasses.
“I write short stories to get rid of
bad ideas,” the writer told me later. “And I write novels to
escape for years from this horrible world. I envy models. Some day
models will be the only artists left. People write stories because
there are problems. No problems? No writers. No writers? No
problems! A perfect world!”
Like model boxing, the 112th American
Cream Contest was another bonus level that you could only encounter
as a reward for surviving long enough in New York. These bonus
levels come suddenly and without warning. You grit your teeth and
take the ride.
During the entire journey to the
contest, I kept asking Frank Fry and Whistle if they were going to
kill me.
They kept laughing at me every time I
asked this question. Over and over again they laughed. To be fair,
the question started as a joke, but by the end, I was asking it
seriously.
“Seriously, are you guys going to
kill me?” I asked.
Frank Fry laughed wordlessly, holding
his belly and rolling his eyes up to heaven. Whistle laughed with
half of his mouth, making a noise like a pan of sizzling fat being
waved over an open fire.
We took the train to the ferry.
We took the ferry to Staten Island.
We got in a cab.
Frank Fry handed the cab driver a slip
of paper and put his finger to his lips. He also handed the cab
driver a hundred dollar bill.
The cab driver took us out to the
middle of nowhere. The cab came to a slow stop. We were now beside a
muddy swamp at the end of a long, deserted road. We were still in
New York City, but just barely.
“Seriously, guys -- are you going to
kill me?” I asked.
The night was darker than the cab's
tinted windows. I looked over my shoulder at the lights of Manhattan
and saw boats going back and forth on the water. We got out of the
cab, standing at the edge of the swamp.
The cab driver took off before I could
ask him for help. I thought about screaming, but it was like there
was a staple through my jaws.
I wasn’t the one who needed help.
My sister was the one who needed help.
Was I going to die out here for helping
her?
“Fine,” I mumbled to myself as we
stumbled out into the muddy swamp in the middle of nowhere. “Fine.”
We marched out into the darkness. I
kept looking at the lights of Manhattan, just in case they were the
last thing I ever saw. I followed Frank Fry. Whistle came behind
me, ostensibly to “keep me from getting lost.”
“The contest,” he said. “Is. A
very solemn. And secret. Tradition.”
I could sense there were shapes in the
darkness. Big shapes, like buildings, but with strange dimensions.
At first, I thought they were the carcasses of giant animals. Whales
or mastodons. We threaded through these shadowy monuments, and it
wasn’t until I nearly tripped on a rusted anchor half-buried in the
mud that I realized that these shapes were beached ships.
We were in a graveyard for the old
boats that had once sailed around New York harbor.
The boats were fascinating enough to
make me forget my impending doom. I tried to make out their names in
the darkness. Most of the boats were tugs and ferries.
We stopped in front of one of the dark
shapes. Frank Fry tapped his nose, considering this boat. It was
different than the others. It was longer and sleeker. There was no
second story.
I turned my head to to the side. It
was a beached submarine.
“It is funny,” said Whistle. “That
you. Should think. That. We might want. To murder you. That is
precisely. What happened. Here. On this submarine. Many years
ago. It ran aground. In the shallows. It is a German. Vessel.
But a diver! Found it. In the harbor. This diver. Was trying to
find. A place in the city. Where he could have. Privacy. For his.
Experiments. He would kidnap. Girls. And row them. To this
submarine. There. He would perform. Lobotomies. On them. And use
them. However he wanted. Until the girls died. Of starvation.
There was no. Escape. From the. Partially sunken. Submarine.”
He took a deep breath.
“It is. The perfect place. For. A
film contest.”
He put his hand on my arm.
“Isn’t that? What? Cinema does?
Performs? Lobotomies?”
“The Irish tell stories of
fish-people that steal souls and keep them underwater in pots meant
for lobsters,” I blurted.
“Sounds like. What. Good directors
do. With movie cameras. Steal souls. And keep them. In pots.”
We climbed a ladder on the side of the
submarine, climbing over the rounded belly of the vessel and scaling
a gate that went all the way around the cylindrical top. We crawled
along the top of the submarine to a hatch that Frank Fry twisted
open.
He opened the hatch and went down into
the darkness. I followed him. Whistle followed me, closing the
hatch above us.
“Oh thank god,” I mumbled as soon
as I came down the ladder.
There were people everywhere. They
were drinking and laughing. The submarine had been gutted from the
inside out and the German steel had been replaced with Danish pine
and Swedish plastic.
There were couches along the walls and
stacks of folding chairs. There was an open bar, and a pair of
bartenders were furiously making drinks and doling them out to the
gathered partygoers. Most of the men and women were wearing tuxedos.
I had never been so glad that I didn’t
know anything about popular culture. I had the vague impression that
I was in a room full of famous people, but I didn’t know any of
them by name or reputation.
I had a feeling like I had seen most of
them before, but I didn’t know where or when. It was like being on
a subway platform in your neighborhood. You know that you have seen
all the people standing with you, possibly hundreds of times, but you
have deleted them from your mind so often to save room for actual
memories that they remain unknown to you.
The only person I recognized was a man
who was two feet taller than everyone else in the room. He was
wearing a cowboy hat and he had long, lanky arms and legs. I
couldn’t remember his name, but the media had been selling him to
the entire country for several years now. He was the one responsible
for all those billion dollar movies where huge robots beat the shit
out of each other in order to keep the planet safe for cars, cell
phones, soft drinks, and miniskirts.
The tall director seemed nervous.
“The kids are learning to make cream
on the internet,” I overheard him saying to a tiny man with a thick
black beard. “They are re-cutting our piece-of-shit films into
short art movies. We won’t be an exclusive club forever. We ought
to just release a torrent of the whole collection and be done with
it. Why live in fear?”
“When I make cream, there are only
five of us on-set who know what I am doing,” said the man with the
beard. “I have been working with the same inner circle for decades
now. What do we gain from going public?”
“I want to show people,” said the
tall man. “There are people out there who are ready for what we
do. You have a good reputation. My reputation is shit.”
I wandered toward the bar, pushing
through the excited crowd.
“Hello there,” said a Latin
American man with huge, flat white teeth, sliding up to me and
filling my field of vision with his smile. He handed me a flute of
champagne. His eyes went in two separate directions like a frog.
“Did you know that I have just been voted the worst director of all
time by Entertainment magazine?”
“Who are you?” I asked.
He laughed at me and downed his own
glass of champagne.
“This is the only day of the year
when I am not a fool to the world,” he said. “It is all worth
it.’
“It must be very liberating,” I
suggested.
“I make cream out of video game
movies,” he said. “I finance them by running a shell game on my
Brazilian investors. They are always paying me for my last project,
and then I take money off the top for my next one. I am in so much
debt. My corporations are bankrupt a thousand times. No one sees my
movies except as a joke. They receive zero stars, and I cannot blame
the reviewers. But I am making them into something truly beautiful
and truly transgressive. You have to believe me.”
“I believe you,” I said.
“You have never been here before. I
would have noticed you. You will see. Tonight, I am not the worst
director in the world. Tonight, perhaps I am the best.”
He swayed on his feet. He was drunk
and he was staring down my dress, but there was something charming
about him anyway. He was like a little boy escaping school for the
summer, running down the hall and banging on lockers.
“Who brought you here?” he asked.
“I am here with Frank Fry,” I said,
feeling a measure of pride.
“Whistle is the real genius, isn’t
he?” he whispered to me. “He and Frank are never far apart from
each other, are they? Their relationship is part of their art, isn’t
it?”
“I haven’t thought about it,” I
admitted.
“One is the body, the other is the
voice,” he said. “But they both have eyes. They both have very
good eyes. The eyes are the soul, you know. Vision is all in the
eyes. I have always said this. You can read it in my interviews.”
“I will run right home and read
them,” I said.
He laughed at me, putting one meaty paw
on my shoulder. I excused myself, slipping out from under his
embrace.
While I was talking to the video game
director, the submarine became a flurry of activity. People set up
folding chairs, lining them into rows. Everyone was helping. The
two bartenders directed the directors. Everyone was laughing and
downing last shots of liquor.
I watched an old man find a place for
himself in the back row, and I realized that of all the famous
directors here, he was the only one who was familiar to me. It was
Alejandro Jodorowsky, the Chilean filmmaker. I was obsessed with his
movies in college.
He sat with an aluminum cane across his
knees.
“He comes every year but he never
votes,” said a handsome, well-dressed man with a pencil-thin
mustache who caught me staring. The man had a Baltimore accent. “He
used to make the best cream of all time. But the studios figured out
what he was doing. He wouldn't let George Harrison be in one of his
movies because George Harrison refused to get naked, and so the
Beatles ruined him.”
Jodorowski seemed to be meditating.
His bright eyes were full of wonder and mischief.
The tall director who made the
expensive movies about robots (Was his name Tony Scott? Or was it
Michael Bay? I knew his name was something simple and short) pulled
a screen down to cover one whole wall of the beached submarine.
The smell of buttery popcorn tantalized
my nose. The bar became a concession stand.
The bartenders set up trays full of
cherry chocolates, bowls full of red caviar, stacks of griddle cakes,
and fried oysters. Popcorn churned inside huge plastic cubes, and
the bartenders shoveled out popcorn into paper bags for the
directors, drizzling real butter on top.
A wiry man in wire-frame spectacles
went to the front of the room and stood in front of the screen. His
black skin in front of the white screen made him look like a stick
figure.
“Please, everyone,” he said
quietly. “Please find a seat. It is now midnight, and we must
begin. As tradition says, we have five films to watch tonight, and
then we will vote for a winner. Each of you should have received
your silver ball in the mail. As you know, if you do not cast your
vote now, you may save your silver ball for another year if you so
desire. The teacups are over here.”
He gestured to a table with five
teacups on it, each of which had a placard in front of it with a
different director’s name written in elaborate cursive. Behind the
table, there was a whole cabinet full of teacups, all of them from
different epochs and countries.
“Remember that a vote cannot be taken
back once it is cast. I urge you to screen all of the films before
voting, but tradition says you may cast your vote at any time.”
He sighed and wiped his spectacles on
his shirt.
“One day men will have sex robots and
women will be able to reproduce at will, selecting whatever genes are
most satisfactory to them from a list. Until then, there must be
sex. Where there is sex, there is drama. But this drama need not be
dull. Our first film will be “Dinosaur Vampire.”
The whip-thin black man sat down in the
front row and the lights went down.
I sat down in the closest chair I could
find. Though the room was full of smoke, everyone was respectfully
silent. The film quality from the tiny projector was perfect. A
million lumens! I ate dark chocolate and oysters from a silver
plate.
“Dinosaur Vampire” turned out to be
cream from the very same video game director who had accosted me.
The original film was about prehistoric
vampires living among dinosaurs and preying upon early human beings,
and it was evidently based on a popular video game. In the game,
human beings banded together to fight vampires, using the dinosaurs
as unlikely allies.
However, the cream from “Dinosaur
Vampire” was a ten minute short film where a vampire and human
woman had violent sex inside the belly of a brontosaurus. The
brontosaurus, in turn, was having violent sex with another
brontosaurus. The scene juxtaposed both sex acts with roaring
speed-metal and footage of cell division. At the end, the
brontosaurus was torn apart by a pack of condors that rescued the
delirious human and then slaughtered the vampire.
Naked, the human woman rode a condor
toward the sun while more heavy metal music played. It was
simultaneously breathtaking and childish. It was undeniably art.
“Dinosaur Vampire” finished, and
the director stood up and took a short bow. His eyes found mine from
across the room and he saluted me with his glass of champagne.
The next movie was much more subdued,
though no less mesmerizing.
This cream was cut from a movie called
“God Killers,” a movie about Vatican assassins. The cream had
nothing to do with any of that. Evidently, the director of “God
Killers” had been able to get special access to hidden parts of the
Vatican while filming her movie there. Specifically, the cream of
“God Killers” was filmed in the room where the stone penises were
kept that had been cut off the statues during the “Fig Leaf
Revolution” of Pope Clement XIII.
These holy penises could obviously not
be thrown away, so they were wrapped in oiled rags in cabinets in one
of the Vatican’s deepest sub-basements. They were indexed
according to size and shape.
The cream of “God Killers” was a
gay romp through this penis room, where priests, bishops, cardinals,
and the Pope serviced each other using the castrated genitals of God,
David, Mercury, and Apollo. The sex scenes took place all over the
Vatican, and culminated in ritual sodomy atop the glass tomb of Pope
Pius IV.
The camera angles made it seem as
though Pius was watching the debauchery through the window of a
jack-off booth in an adult bookstore.
This cream got substantially more
applause than “Dinosaur Vampire,” and a few directors dropped
their silver balls into this director’s teacup, praising the
director’s audacity out loud. The director waved shyly from the
corner of the room. She didn’t seem to want attention.
“She finally cracked the Vatican,”
said a woman next to me who was smoking a joint. She wore cat’s
eye glasses and a cable-knit sweater. “She's been trying for
decades. I love that old bitch.”
The third cream took me by surprise.
It was cream made out of the same robot movie that had been storming
the country all year long.
The cream from the robot movie was
utterly abstract. It reminded me of the classic wizard’s duel
where wizards take the forms of different creatures and concepts in
order to gain an advantage over one another.
In the cream, the robots kept
transforming into different shapes in order to fuck each other. The
savagery of their sex destroyed entire cities. Gears penetrated
grindshafts. Motor oil spurted everywhere. The noise was deafening,
and the machine screams of technological orgasm made my own insides
churn.
A robot the size of an airplane turned
into a massive penis, penetrating a robot the size of an ocean liner.
They fucked, becoming dogs, becoming flowers, becoming murderous
insects. They transformed into oil derricks and starships. Grasping
hands reached out of the metal anarchy. The hands twisted around
metal breasts and gripped metal thighs.
The technical achievement was
outstanding, even if I didn’t quite understand the point. The
directors in the room marveled at the pyrotechnic display.
“As you can see,” said the tall,
lanky director of the film, standing up in front of the movie, taking
off his cowboy hat and letting images from the film wash over him.
“We won’t need actors very much longer. Actors just get in the
way of the action.”
There was a manic gleam in his eyes.
He sat back down.
“Backflip,” the fourth cream film
of the evening, was a biography of the gymnast Olga Korbut set during
the glory days of the Soviet Union.
This pornography was like a circus
performance. The combination of sex and extremely talented
gymnastics was jaw-dropping. It was exactly what everyone had always
wanted to see.
During the gymnastic porn, I went to
the back of the room to help myself to some caviar. It seemed
appropriate on account of all the Russians in red uniforms
penetrating each other while bent over pommel horses and tossing each
other into the air to land split on phalluses, twisted, like graceful
pretzels.
I clamped my mouth around a heaping
spoonful of caviar and closed my eyes, savoring the squish of the
salty jelly between my teeth and gums.
There was a hand on my shoulder.
I swallowed the caviar, sucking it
through my teeth like jello, turning to look.
It was my sister. She wore a headscarf
and sunglasses.
“How did you get in here?” I asked.
She didn’t say anything. She took
off her sunglasses. All I could see in the darkness was the
unswerving hate that burned in her eyes.
“You followed me,” I said.
“I thought they might hurt you,”
she said. “I didn’t expect…this. But you love it, don’t
you? Are you enjoying your caviar?”
Her lips trembled.
“You think I deserve to be a porn
star,” she said. "You hate me."
I didn’t respond. She advanced on me
until her mouth was inches from my ear. I thought she might bite it
off.
“You have always hated me,” she
said. “You have always wanted me to fail. I can’t believe I
trusted you. I can’t believe I thought you would help me.”
“E______, trust me, this is bigger
than the Academy Awards. Take a look around you! The most creative
people in film are in this room.”
“You have proved your point about the
moral bankruptcy of my medium. Are you happy?”
“Wait a second,” I said.
“Actually, I love this stuff. I like being a part of great art.
That’s why I try so hard to sell novels. I never thought you would
be a real artist who would make something good.”
She thought I was mocking her. She
slapped me. Luckily, her slap coincided with a triple backflip on
parallel bars that ended in a shuddering cum-shot. The actress
playing Olga Korbut stuck the landing. The slap of my sister’s
hand to my face coincided perfectly with the onscreen slap of a
perfectly-muscled ass to a perfectly-muscled thigh and the shudder of
semen drizzling from a perfectly-muscled cock.
“I’m not kidding,” I said. “Did
you see that? These movies are amazing.”
She frowned. I realized that we had
changed places. Here I was defending cinema for what it could be.
“You haven’t even seen the film
yet,” I said. “It is not just the content that is brilliant, it
is the medium. The way the ‘cream’ is stolen from the studios is
what makes it brilliant. The way these crude masterpieces are
embezzled from an audience that doesn’t deserve them is what makes
them honest.”
“Don’t you dare try to be
intellectual with me, little sister,” she said. “Don’t you
dare talk down to me about my own art form.”
“Art form?” I repeated. “Symphony
for Flesh and Signs – the cream, not the film – is the best work
you have ever done. All these people here will see that. You will
be able to get any role you want. Not as a movie actress, but as a
cream goddess. If you knew anything at all about your ‘art form,’
then you would…”
She grabbed my arm, squeezing it.
“I am going to tell the whole world
about these perverts,” she said, brandishing her phone. “I have
recorded everything. I don’t care about my own reputation. All of
our reputations will be ruined together when I reveal the truth about
this sick cult.”
“But the cream is what makes the
whole goddamn motion picture industry worth it.”
There were tears in her eyes.
The room filled with applause.
“Backflip” was over. There was only one film left to screen.
“Don’t you see?” I said. “Cream
changes everything. I am the biggest snob in the world, but now I
can watch any movie and enjoy it. I can watch romantic comedies,
action movies, sports movies, melodramas, biographies, costume
dramas, and even science fiction with total interest. I know that
there are shadows now. I know that there are margins. Even if I
never get a chance to see the cream, I can imagine the fruit by
studying the peelings.”
She opened her mouth to speak, but the
room filled instead with the opening overture from the “Symphony
for Signs and Flesh.”
Violins. Techno.
Twelve boxes were projected onto the
screen in front of us, and my sister’s face filled all twelve of
them. She turned to watch herself, mesmerized.
“It’s very complex,” she said.
“All these movies are so filthy. But so complex.”
The movie began.
“Watch,” I said. “See what they
made from you. See how they captured the truth about you.”
“The robot movie was a surprise,”
she admitted. “I don’t know what to think about any of this.“
Suddenly she was desperate. She wasn’t
angry at all anymore.
“Tell me what to think,” she said.
“Feel it with your body,” I said.
My sister couldn’t help herself. She
had always loved looking in the mirror. And here were twelve mirrors
at once. She watched herself. Her features became feral and hungry.
The whole submarine was captivated by
the kaleidoscopic orgy that she conducted. At one point, I grabbed
her hand and squeezed it. The audience hooted and hollered, becoming
more excited around us than they had at any of the other films.
“I didn’t know it would be like
this,” she whispered beside me. “It is not what I expected. It
is not dirty, somehow. It’s like melting.”
The screens blended together, rotating
around each other as the orgy built to climax. On the screen, men
were spurting like kinked garden hoses and women were shrieking like
tea kettles. Faces and bodies blurred in patterns, morphing into
each other. In the center screen, my sister’s face flickered into
my own face and then back again.
In the back of the theater, Alejandro
Jodorowsky stood up on his chair.
“What is the sound of one hand
clapping?” he shouted. "Gentlemen and ladies, WHAT IS THE
SOUND OF ONE HAND CLAPPING?"
He was holding his erect penis with one
hand.
In the submarine, there was the sudden
noise of belts being unzipped and pants falling to the ground.
We watched, shocked, as all of the men
and women in the submarine furiously began to masturbate to the film.
They cheered! They cursed! They threw
popcorn!
“Salute the film, comrades!”
shouted the tall, lanky director who loved robots so much. “Salute
the film with all you’ve got!”
The sex sounds in the submarine mixed
with the aggressive, insane pornography and my heart beat so fast
that I thought I might pass out. My sister squeezed my hand and I
squeezed back.
“We want what we want to be,” said
my face on the screen. For a moment, my face was the face of God.
“Feed and be full! Take and be satisfied! Come and be whole!”
All around us, sperm shot into the air
and fluid leaked from shuddering clits. All of the famous directors
came together while watching the famous actress, cheering and
shouting at the cream they had skimmed.
“Applause is only a simulation of
this,” she whispered. “I never knew that before. This is the
highest...honor…for a performer.”
I grinned at her.
When the screen went black and the
lights came on, there was a frenzy as the world’s most famous
directors pulled up their pants, reaching into their pockets for the
tiny silver balls that were their ballots.
The directors crowded around the table
full of teacups, clamoring to cast their votes.
We couldn’t see what was happening,
but all of a sudden there was a hush as Alejandro Jodorowsky got up
and pushed through the crowd, shuffling forward while clutching his
cane and commanding everyone to get out of his way.
The directors cleared a path for the
old man.
Frank Fry and Whistle joined us in the
back of the submarine. I was still squeezing my sister’s hand, but
all the pain and panic had drained out of her. The room reeked of
sex and liquor.
Jodorowski beat the other directors
with his cane until they agreed to lift him onto the table.
Swaying slightly, the old man stared at
the other directors with stony silence. We could see now that Frank
Fry’s teacup was already half-full of silver balls, while the rest
of the teacups only contained a few votes each.
Jodorowsky pulled a plastic bag full of
silver balls from his pocket.
“As you all know, I have not voted
for any cream in over fifty years,” he said. “The last time I
voted was for my own film, still regarded as the best cream of all
time.”
One of the directors coughed. Another
director mumbled “asshole” under his breath loud enough to earn a
dangerous glare from the old man. The old man brandished his bag of
silver balls as if he was holding a severed head by the hair.
Jodorowsky took a deep breath, and then
he dropped the bag full of uncast votes onto the table, smashing
Frank Fry’s teacup. The bag burst and silver balls went
everywhere.
Jodorowsky rubbed his hands together as
the room broke into unrestrained cheering.
My sister collapsed against me.
I knew there was a good chance that she
would hate me later. I knew there was a good chance that later there
would be lawsuits, recriminations, and denials. But for now, her
soul was safe.
I felt her tremble in my arms, the same
way she trembled long ago when I rescued her from the public pool and
she began to breathe again, lying there on the concrete, coughing
water out of her lungs and embracing all the possibilities of a sunny
sky.
15 comments:
You may have just outdone yourself. I am in awe.
Fantastic work!! Loved it!
This might be your best work yet. I couldn't stop reading. I know that I'll think about this story every time I see a movie. The description of New York was stunningly accurate as well.
Thank you for doing what you do. Your stories are magnificent.
This may be the most beautiful thing I've ever read. I eagerly await any of your published works.
Wow. That was incredible.
You are a brilliant author! Brava
Congratulations, you did it. You won. I believe you know what you've won. Only you could.
Thanks for another submarine ride
You're one of the most creative writers working today, published or non.
fucking awesome!
Mr. Jones, I have no idea how I found your blog but I am incredibly happy that I did. You strike a balance of fun and hopeful and dark and depraved that makes me smile and want to write. Thank you for your stories.
I like the idea of this story - it's great! But I have 3 little suggestions:
1) You spoil the idea of cream-movies right at the beginning. Perhaps it would be better to introduce it in the middle in the hotel scene?
2) The idea of NY as levels is nice, but it stops the flow of the story. I was reading your story on my eInk-Reader via Instapaper and I was wondering if there was an parsing error because of the sudden break.
3) There is no way you can fit so many people and an cinema on a german WWII submarine. They are quite tiny inside: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nwc0shJ2aYc
Miracle Jones, with each new story you publish I am again and again stricken with the same sentiment:
You are one among the greatest writers of all time.
This is not an overstatement in the slightest. Like a modern-day Dostoyevsky or Nabokov, your words transfix me in such a way that only one who seemingly lives what he has written could do.
The fact that you are not a world-renowned author with a place in any respectable collection of literature is a travesty of the highest degree. You are truly a scholar among men. Never forget that.
Just finished reading the scroll you handed out. Reading it was pure enjoyment. Not just your imagination but the execution of this story was superb.
So this is why you do this. This is why you write this blog. You're a legitimate author, with an agent, a publisher, an editor. You unleash your literary works out into the world, but only after they are sterilized, edited down and whittled away until it's fit for the masses. That's how you live. That's where you get your budget from. But while you like to write long, lengthy novels and construct intricate worlds to play around with, sometimes you just need to write something primal and full of emotion. Writer's porn. You like to jam as much feeling and emotion and raw brilliance into as short a story as you can to make your readers look on in awe at your work, and you say this is what I live for. This is what writing really should be. This is what art truly is. And it is only for those who truly understand, those who would not turn away in shame, those who understand the need to feel as you do, those who are worthy.
That's you write these stories. This is your masturbation. This is the porn that you crave. Well done.
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