Showing posts with label river phoenix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label river phoenix. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2020

There's part of you that can't help but to see right through this part of me



River Phoenix is on Spotify.

I remember searching his name on the music streaming platform a few years back, curious to see if anybody’s ever written a song with his name in the title. There were a handful, but none by artists I’d heard of. The first result, though, was an artist page with only one track called “Curi Curi,” a minute and fifteen seconds long. I didn’t know what to expect until about halfway, when the late actor’s voice suddenly began reciting a spoken word piece. I felt a jolt; I didn’t expect it to actually be him.

The track was a collaboration with Brazilian singer-songwriter Milton Nascimento, whom I would learn had been a good friend of his. I didn’t save it to my library, but I would listen to it sometimes, when I wanted to hear his voice or when I was missing him. Which was a foolish thought, wasn’t it? He died exactly a year before I was born, on the Halloween of 1993. We never walked an earth where the other existed.

I was ten years old when my mom pointed to the television and said, as though greeting an old friend, “Oh, that boy is dead.” Stand By Me was on and I looked past her outstretched arm to watch the kid with his sleeves rolled up and a cigarette in his mouth, his eyes vulnerable but also world-weary. I couldn’t comprehend that he was right there, and yet he was also gone.

I would see him again years later, in The Thing Called Love, one of his last films. He was all grown up. He played guitar and sang softly, somberly. He was tall and brooding, hair dyed darker, but his eyes were vulnerable and world-weary all the same. He was beautiful. “He’s dead,” my mom reminded me, sounding slightly sadder this time.

I developed a crush that never went away.

The summer I was fifteen was a long one, the days stretching and bleeding into one another. I never had anywhere to be or anything to do but stay inside and read young-adult novels or watch Tumblr-acceptable indie movies like Nowhere Boy and Adventureland. It occurred to me that I hadn’t seen River Phoenix in anything other than the two movies I’d already watched, so I spent the rest of that summer exhausting his brief but prolific filmography.

His characters had the most wonderful names: Chris Chambers, Mike Waters, Eddie Birdlace, Devo Nod. A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon was terrible and cringe-inducing until the final few minutes, when it suddenly grew a heart and became more poignant and nostalgic than anything. More fitting of its original title — Aren’t You Even Gonna Kiss Me Goodbye? — which still pinches at my chest sometimes. Dogfight was a fumbling romance with Lili Taylor, both square in its earnestness and inexplicably chic. Running on Empty was the movie that earned him an Oscar nomination at age eighteen, and the movie I still cry to all the time, ten years later.

I learned, not long after, that he had a band called Aleka’s Attic. His songs were in the first person, his lyrics raw and capricious but clear and honest in his singing. He sounds young, but also like he has outlived everybody else. There were low-quality recordings of their songs straying across the internet — some of them from tapes the band made and sold themselves, some of them released through benefit albums for animal rights — which quickly became an on-again, off-again soundtrack to my own youth.

I saw a band manager, once, at a concert I had attended, who looked so much like a ghost of him — right down to the sandy blond hair that reached just past his shoulders — that I had to stop and catch my breath. But none of my friends knew who River Phoenix was. My crush on him, which had grown to include more complicated feelings like grief and disquiet, was something that was evidently mine and mine alone. Almost like he had been an imaginary friend I’d made up; something personal that I was keeping for my own.

That’s not exactly true anymore. I’ve noticed in the passing years that he’s become part of the internet boyfriend canon, put in the same category as, say, Leonardo DiCaprio in Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet or, worse yet, Johnny Depp when he was dating Winona Ryder. Like either could ever live up to him. (Like Leo would have ever had the same career he’s had if River’s spot had never been vacated.) 

He was bigger than me, I realized. He had been a teen heartthrob, after all, his face plastered on the pages of BOP and Tiger Beat. I wasn’t even the first or the last person who’s put him on this impossible pedestal, who’s listened to his songs and thought she understood him, who’s held on to him as a tragic and dreamy figure. There were many of us who longed for him on the widow’s walks of our minds.

When I turned twenty-four, one of my first thoughts was that I would be older than him forever.

When I got a Spotify account, my iTunes library was left on my hard drive, abandoned and all but forgotten — the Aleka’s Attic songs included. It wasn’t until earlier this year, when Joaquin Phoenix had mentioned his brother during his Oscars speech (he and River were the only boys out of a brood of five) that I remembered they existed and wanted so suddenly and so badly to hear them again.

I typed the band’s name into the Spotify search bar, thinking I’d probably get nothing. But then there it was, an official artist page listing three of the songs I’d known and grown up with. Rain Phoenix, River’s bandmate and sister, had finally let them see the light of day after the band’s activities were cut short following her brother’s death.

River Phoenix is on Spotify, for real this time.

There was “Where I’d Gone,” a day-in-the-life kind of song that grew more unhinged as it progressed. There was “Scales & Fishnails,” a brief and dreamlike interlude I’d once imagined playing at my wedding someday. And there was my favorite of all, I couldn’t believe it was there, “In the Corner Dunce” — which River had written and recorded when he was eighteen and feels like the most authentic piece of himself he’d ever left behind, singing like it hurts and like it matters: I rarely get to feel, you know, I hardly ever feel in place.

I’ve read that Rain Phoenix hopes to continue releasing the rest of the tracks, completing the album that was once meant to be called Never Odd or Even. I hope it includes another favorite, “Note to a Friend.” A lone guitar chord, and then River sings: My days are heavy on the inside of my night. Rain joins in, and together they sing of better days about to come. The verse repeats, and so does the refrain. Once, and then again: Better they come, better days come.

He’s been gone so long. And yet he lives on years and years later through this small thing — an official release, the kind his band never got to have, on something so modern and so now, anachronistic in the best way.

So strange, and yet so welcome. Like that summer all over again, having him come alive once more like it was for me and me alone — only this time, I know I’m not alone, and I can’t wait to share it with anyone who’s willing to listen. This is River Phoenix, I would tell them. You can’t find many traces of him anymore, but he’s right here.

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

viewer discretion is (not) advised


I found out about Alejandro Amenábar’s 1996 feature debut Thesis on the same list of 1990s horror movies that led me to Perfect Blue. I have to say, the person who wrote that best-of list just gets me—or, more likely, they just have great taste—because it became one of my favorite movies not even a quarter of the way in. 




The Spanish thriller centers on Ángela, a film student who’s studying violence in cinema for her thesis. Her search for material to analyze brings her to Chema, a scruffy classmate with an almost unhealthy fixation on anything gory and NSFL, and the extensive video collection to prove it. While watching a movie in his apartment (practically decorated like a horror museum), Ángela wonders aloud about the idea of real violence caught on tape. (Un)lucky for her, she gets her answer: The next morning, she finds her thesis adviser’s body in the viewing room of the university’s video archives, and what killed him was a heart attack caused by a snuff film hidden in the collection. The tape depicts the brutal torture and killing of Vanessa, a girl from her class who’d gone missing two years ago. 




To further complicate things, Ángela meets and finds herself helplessly drawn to Bosco, a handsome and aggressive young man who claims to have known Vanessa—and who may or may not have had a hand in her disappearance. Desperate, terrified, and curious, Ángela enlists Chema to help her investigate the recorded murder, and soon uncovers a mystery that’s bigger and more sadistic than she ever imagined. And try as she might, she can’t look away. 



Mmm, jelly doughnuts.
I don’t know how easily perceptible this is about me, but I’m the kind of person who has a favorite serial killer. (It’s Jeffrey Dahmer.) Which is horrible, I know. But my interest is purely from a true-crime, psychological perspective… All right. Maybe I have more in common with Ángela than I thought. Point is, there is nothing out there quite like Thesis, with its balance of academia, snuff films, Nancy Drew-type sleuthing but better, dangerous boys, and Hitchcockian intrigue and paranoia, complete with a tense but highly subdued chase scene that turns the tables on our heroine. Nothing out there that’s as sharp or as subtle and surprisingly sensitive. There’s even a light spatter of humor throughout. 




Basically everything I want to say re: this movie is already in this excellent (spoiler-heavy!) discussion on Girl Meets Freak, a super nifty horror film blog that sadly hasn’t been updated in around two years. So many great points and witty observations about things that I barely even noticed. (My only qualm is: How could they not find Chema, played by a 21-year-old Fele Martínez, easy on the eyes?! I told my cousin this and she vehemently sided with me.) 

Still, there are a few more things I want to rave about.




Aside from incredibly nuanced performances from the leads (Martínez is joined by Ana Torrent and Eduardo Noriega), Thesis finds strength in layered characters with varying degrees of grace, magnetism, and moral ambiguity. There’s Ángela’s true relationship with violence, Chema’s exploitation obsession and whether or not he’s taken it a step too far, and whatever the hell Basco’s deal is. Such characterizations kept me guessing and made the twists and turns of the plot fresh instead of having them come across as stale or tiresome. The mystery itself is tightly written and very clever, with relevant clues and secret hideouts and all these great, horrifying details.The film’s two-hour runtime hardly drags, and it’s destined for multiple rapt rewatch sessions because it’s like there’s always something new to discover about it after every viewing. 



Nylon Private Icon material.
Finally, I adore how it had a very clean look to it that almost appeared to make use of a predominantly pastel (or at least light) palette. It just worked so well. I’m obsessed with the production design—from the My Own Private Idaho poster and little plants in Ángela’s pale pink room to Chema’s creepy/impressive nightmare lair with tons of horror paraphernalia and “REDRUM” spray-painted on the wall. Some literary references and callbacks made it sweet. (Really!) There’s also Ángela’s wardrobe, a fine, ultra-covetable example of the fashion of the decade. Very 1996. (Come to think of it, Chema and Basco, in their own very distinct ways, weren’t slacking in the dress-sense department, either.) 

Which, all in all, adds up to the fact that I’m super glad Thesis exists, and that it was made the way it was, when it was. How I was able to live twenty-one years without it is one case I’ll never solve. 

Monday, June 20, 2016

It’s the best euphemism for getting the living crap kicked out of you that I’ve ever heard.


I was seven years old when Rico Yan died, gone to sleep and never to wake up again, aged twenty-seven and fresh off the immense success of Got to Believe! 

He’s been gone fourteen years. I barely remember anything, to be honest. But somehow, his impact on me remains, and it’s as great and painful as ever. I have no idea why, but the void he’s left is still unfilled, and in my head, his presence is still really vivid. 

In some ways, this was my first true brush with the experience of death, how tragic and unbelievable it can be, how bad its timing is. How it can affect a person. Maybe that’s why. 

*

I was ten when my mom pointed to River Phoenix on television and said, offhand and matter-of-fact, “Oh, that boy is dead.” Stand by Me was on HBO, and I watched that cigarette-smoking kid with his sleeves rolled up and his vulnerability fluctuating with strange fascination, because I couldn’t comprehend that he was right there, and he was also gone. 

I would see him years later, in The Thing Called Love, one of his last films, also on HBO. He was all grown up. He brooded even more than he did as Chris Chambers. He played guitar and sang softly, somberly. He was beautiful. “He’s dead,” my mom reminded me, sounding slightly sadder this time, her voice conveying the sayang of it all. 

In the years that followed I would exhaust River’s filmography and learn more about him than I ever had any business knowing. I would listen to his songs and delude myself into thinking that I understood him. The more alive—the more flawed—he seemed, the higher I put him on a pedestal. But I never quite forgot the fact that came before the rest: He’s gone. And call me morbid, but that only pushed my infatuation further.   

*

I was thirteen when Entertainment Tonight aired a visual obituary for Heath Ledger. I had never seen a single film of his; the most I ever heard of him was through a pop culture reference Meg Cabot made on All-American Girl. I started off detached and slightly curious, but I was a blubbering mess by the end of it. He had one of the nicest smiles I had (still have) ever seen. 

I fell into a routine: I made my dad buy me a VCD of 10 Things I Hate About You at the now-defunct Video City in SM North that I watched every day after school. I drew a black ribbon on my hand to signal my mourning; I’d refill it when it faded and draw it on again after it washed off. I read Wuthering Heights because Heath and his sister had been named after the central characters. When I got older, I started putting “The Weakness in Me” by Joan Armatrading on and walking around bookshops, pretending he was following me with a copy of The Feminine Mystique, as normal people are wont to do. 

But when I think of him, I think mostly of Patrick Verona and William Thatcher, and with that I do him a disservice, again and again and again.

*

It was around that same time when I was thirteen, my Heath Era, that I found Charlie Bartlett among a pile of pirated DVDs at North Ridge Plaza. The poster looked cool: skinny kid looking smug, doodles all around his head, Kat Dennings, pre-Iron Man/comeback Robert Downey, Jr. 

At this age I had begun testing the waters of nonconformity and embracing weird uncoolness. Charlie Bartlett sold prescription drugs to people at his school and was cheerful to a fault, unlike broody, moody me, but he was a wiry, vibrant outsider who was never anyone else but himself, and I found comfort in that. 

It was also around this time that I bought a back issue of CosmoGIRL! that featured Anton Yelchin—Charlie Bartlett himself. He was eighteen. He talked and made quick jokes (no doubt spoken in his signature animated tone) about taking pictures (he would end up getting a better camera than his late-2000s phone and get really, really good), buying vinyl (another factor that made me want to start my own collection), and sleep (he certainly looked the part). “Confidence is a big thing with [Charlie],” he had said. “He never feels like he has to be certain things for certain people.” 

I was pretty much a goner. I followed his career pretty closely after that: in New York, I Love You as a teen going to prom; in Middle of Nowhere as a lonely amateur drug seller; in Like Crazy as a young man in love and other things that resemble it; in Only Lovers Left Alive as a rock-and-roller with a healthy dose of naivete; in Rudderless as a musician with Fabrizio Moretti-like charm; and in 5 to 7 as a struggling writer who has an affair with an older married woman. And the ones that came before, like the brilliant, difficult Fierce People, and the better known titles, too. He could inhabit characters like, well, crazy. 

He became a constant, an omnipresent comfort. I’d been counting the days until I could see Green Room, and whatever else. There was going to be so much else. 

So when I woke up this morning, checked Twitter, and saw that a friend had tweeted: WHY !!!! DID !!!! ANTON !!!!!! YELCHIN! !!!!!! DIE!!!!!!!!! for the briefest of seconds I thought maybe, just maybe, she had seen a movie. Maybe it was even Green Room. Maybe I’d just been spoiled. 

I’m not going to repeat to you what you already know. I can’t.  

I went to sleep a mere thirty minutes Before. I’d been watching a film in which two sisters were hosting a party, not knowing that their mother was dying in a car crash. They looked so happy, so unaware, that it made me cringe. I never want to be in that position, I decided. 

The funny thing was, ironically, right at that moment, I was. 

My cousin texted me to ask what the hell had happened. That’s when it really hit me. We had discovered Charlie Bartlett together, come to think of it, and have had a joint obsession over Anton forever, I’m just realizing. It’s hard sometimes to convince her to see a certain movie that I love, but I only have to mention his name once to get her to agree. 

Rudderless is a hard film to watch on its own, heartbreaking, and it only gets worse with repeats. Of course, this only makes me like it even more. And now there’s this added layer of heartbreak—I almost feel like never seeing it again. In the 7-Eleven near where I work, I made the mistake of thinking it would be fine to listen to the songs Anton had performed on the soundtrack, where he sang lines like You’re so emotional...guess what, the music never stops, and It’s a long way down/Even longer way back up

I was so wrong. But, hey, my New Years resolution had been crying in public whenever I damn well liked.  

In the beginning it was odd even to me that this loss hurts this much, that it’s getting to me this deep. But the more I thought about it, the more it made sense. All of it was so abrupt. He was so talented, and so real, and so unlike anyone else. He was so young. He would never be twenty-eight. 

And once more it doesn’t compute in my head, which seems to be stuck in denial mode right now. 

I just had to get this off my chest, I think. Someday maybe I’ll write about him and do him justice. But for now I think I need to process.