I'm a writer working to bring back the serial fictions. Remember the days when novels were serialized in print before they appeared as published books? Well, I don't either, but I sure remember reading about it. What better place to bring back original fiction in installments than blogs?!

Showing posts with label muse-auteur relations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label muse-auteur relations. Show all posts

11.04.2009

Muse-Auteur Relations Chapter II: Natasha


Chapter II: Natasha

But the next morning when she wakes, Vivienne realizes that as happy as she is with Jack and his cheekbones, she still needs an actress, so she grabs the stack of headshots she’s accumulated on her desk and adds them to her schoolbag. She is late, she has already missed first period Trig, and she’s cutting into second period Lit now. She knows she ought to hurry, but she doesn’t. She goes into the kitchen and grabs a canned espresso from the fridge as if she has all the time in the world, which she does, because high school is nothing more than a nuisance she has to deal with for the next few months before she can move onto pursuing her career fulltime, as she ought to be doing.
Her father and her brother are breakfasting with their bimbos of the week. Her dad and Alain converse, about god-knows what, while the two girls, who are the same age, twenty-five, eye each other’s prizes, wondering if they’ve made the wrong choice. Vivienne snickers at them, at the way they play whore to these two rich men. She resents that these women represent her gender, she resents the way they play themselves into corners, playing slut and then denying it, becoming stereotypes while thinking that they evade them. They are weak, these women, not like Vivienne, who is strong and smart, and knows better than to sleep with someone and stay for breakfast the next morning. Vivienne never stays. Vivienne is always the one that sneaks out in the middle of the night, she is never the one to wake in an empty bed with a note next to her head. And she never wears their shirts to the breakfast table.
Vivienne isn’t like these women, she is like her father, like her brother. She says she hates them, what they do, but she would rather be like them. She would rather be like Alain, who is only a year older, who she barely knows, because all her life he’s lived with their father in New York while she got shuffled between there and wherever her mother happened to be at that moment; LA, New York, Paris, London, LA, Paris, New York, Paris. And then the announcement of Milan came, and that had been the final straw, before she up and moved to Chicago, where her father had just relocated, where Alain had decided to spend a year, photographing the architecture and the urban landscape.
The only thing Vivienne ever saw him photograph were beautiful, tan blondes, in his bedroom, in his crisp white sheets and standing at the windows, above the sprawling city, naked, vulnerable, fragile. The photos were all pinned up to the walls of his darkroom, beautiful black and white portraits that meant nothing, nothing more than sex and lust and weakness. Vivienne prefers to be like Alain, as much as she hates him, and not like his blondes, his hallow disposable models.
She is her own photographer in her life, she is the one who turns the camera and tells it where to look and what to look at. She is smart, she knows exactly what she wants, and she’s going to get it if it’s the last thing she does. And if she has to leave a few broken hearts in her path, then so be it. But no one is going to call her weak. No one is going to marry her and leave her in a beautiful, empty house sitting on the top of a canyon, broken, running off to frolick some barely-legal starlet. No one is going to leave her in a an empty castle, and no one is going to send her her ten year old, her twelve year old, her fifteen year old daughter to pick up the pieces.

After the meeting with the counselor, Vivienne finally makes it to class. By this time Lit is over, it’s third period, which is Latin American history, where she reads the chapter on Peron as the teacher lectures on Zapata. And then it is lunch, where she lies in the garden of the park next to the school and shoots two other seniors eating lunch. The girl she can’t see, because her back is facing toward Vivienne, so she shoots 8mm footage of the boy, who is interesting. She watches them, and they don’t notice, utterly absorbed in their conversation. They are comfortable with each other, they love each other. They laugh and pout and tease an share their food with each other. Vivienne hates watching couples, but there’s an ease between these two, a comfort. She wishes the boy would look over and see her, see that she is the one imprinting him onto film.
She watches them until the lunch period ends, and they pick up their trash, laughing as they head back to school. Watching them, she has forgotten that she was supposed to be looking for her actress, looking through that pile of softly lit photos.
As she packs her crap back into her back and walks the path to school. The path is a yellow brick road in fact, because this park is called Oz Park, and beside the yellow brick road there are creepy bronze statues of all the characters scattered here and there, terrifying small children when they turn the corners. Vivienne walks past the scarecrow, thinking of the boy, in the garden, how warm he looked with his smatter of freckles and his reddish brown hair, how utterly sincere and unpretentious his mannerisms appeared, how he was not pretending, not acting sly or flirty, or calculating, or horny. She found herself wondering how that blonde had found such a boy, when Vivienne had never even seen one like him before, not anywhere she’d been, not in Paris or London or New York, or LA.
She brushed the thought away, scolding herself, steering her mind back to her film. Boys came and went, she told herself. But her passion, her film, her career, was here to stay. That’s what she was looking for.
When she walked into biology and took her seat, ready to turn on autopilot during today’s lecture on the lungs. But when the teacher called out Natasha and a thin, assured voice answered from the back, Vivienne turned to look. And there she was, her muse. The same blonde who had been sitting in the garden, her back turned toward Vivienne, talking to the interesting boy. Natasha.

Her hair wisped around her hairline in baby-fine curls. The huge windows of the biology lab allowed the afternoon sun to pierce through the room, backlighting her, so that the loose curls of her blonde ponytail seemed to form a halo. Her eyebrows were the barest outline around her eyes, her skin pale, pale enough to make her large eyes pop in their blue. She wore a white cotton shirt and denim cutoffs, there was something very unfashionable about her outfit, something off or old, but it somehow added to her appeal as a muse for Vivienne. She was different. He lunchbox sat on the black lab table in front of her, and it was made of tin, with a picture of the teenaged mutant ninja turtles on it, slightly scraped off. Vivienne grinned, and Natasha saw her, smiling back timidly, then turned to the blackboard and began to copy the diagram the teacher had draw.
“Vivienne, mind showing us the front of your head?” The teacher remarked sarcastically, and Vivienne turned toward him, beaming.
“Not at all, Mr. Johnston. Not at all.”

After class, Vivienne shoved her nearly blank biology notebook into her bag, keeping a close eye on Natasha, to make sure she wouldn’t lose her in the crowd of students pouring into and out of the hallway. She swerved around a couple of people, shoving them to the side before they knew what hit them, and was at Natasha’s side within seconds.
“Hey. I’m Vivienne,” She said.
Natasha looked surprised by the attention, and slightly disbelieving that Vivienne, the girl with serious attitude (in bio, at least), was talking to her. She couldn’t fathom why, or what she could possibly want. But it didn’t take long to find out.
Vivienne grabbed her arms and halted. The crowd kept moving around them, jostling at them as they stood in the center of the hallway during the passing period of four minutes between sixth and seventh.
“You should be in my movie.” Vivienne stated.
Natasha laughed, but Vivienne looked dead serious.
“Why? I can’t act. I’ve never-”
Vivienne waved a hand, dismissing the idea. “That doesn’t matter. I’m not looking for an actress. I’m looking for a muse. And you are just-perfect.”
Natasha paused. This girl was- well, persistent, at the very least. Also, sort of- persuasive. But Natasha had enough to do between her little sister, college applications, science fair, not to mention-
“Please.” Vivienne continued, holding Natasha’s gaze steadily. Natasha’s posture softened, but she broke eye contact for a split second, and realized that they were standing in the hallway, just steps from the biology lab.
“I have to go to class.” Natasha tried to maneuver around Vivienne.
“I’ll find you after school, and I’ll tell you all about it. Do you end ninth?” Vivienne asked. Natasha nodded, still perplexed, and dove into the sea of high school students. Vivienne grinned, pleased with herself, and headed off to Theory of Knowledge in a good mood for the first time that year.
Vivienne headed out of her ninth period class (Spanish) early, under the pretense of a stomach-ache. She walked past security, through the metal detectors, and out the door, crossing the mall. She climbed the hill across from the main building, taking a spot from which she could watch the crowd of students gush out of both the main building and the freshman annex. She spotted Natasha, coming out of the main floor, tucking a book into her bag.
She watches as Natasha raises her head, shielding her eyes from the sun, and scans the crowd. Vivienne grins. So she hadn’t forgotten.
Impatient, Vivienne waves from her spot, grinning, not bothering to wait for Natasha to spot her. Natasha smiles back and climbs to the spot next to Vivienne, sitting in the grass.
“So what’s this movie about, exactly?” Natasha asks, continuing to scan the crowd. Vivienne wonders if she was looking for the boy she’d been talking to at lunch.
“It’s for my college application, to film school.” Vivienne clarifies.
“Yeah, but what would I have to do? What’s it about?” Natasha asks again. Vivienne hates this question. It’s so… factual. Her movie is not factual. Her movies, her art, is about a feeling. Emotion. Poetry. Her movie isn’t prose, it isn’t a story, not in that Hollywood sense. It’s interesting people, and beautiful images and meaning that cannot be carried in words. If it could, she’d be a writer.
“It’s about a feeling. That feeling, when you feel close to someone, but so far away. Intimate, and lonely. The circumstances, what happens, that’s not what matters. You know?”
Natasha thinks for a moment, then nods. Yes. She knows. But what she doesn’t know is what this Vivienne girl wants her to do.
“So what would I do?”
“Your character, she’s lying in this pool, in this big gown, and we think she’s dead. But she isn’t.” Vivienne describes. Natasha waits for more, but Vivienne doesn’t say anything, the only thing she says is:
“Are you a six?”, her eyes sliding over Natasha’s figure.
Natasha nods.
“You should fit into it. You’ll do it, right?”
“I can’t.” She looks away, back at the crowd, searching it.
“Why?” Vivienne asks, in utter disbelief. After all those horrid headshots, she finds the muse of her dreams, delicate, pretty, and utterly authentic, and she refuses? This was not the way it was supposed to work. She only had a month to finish this film, she needed to shoot soon, there was no time to find another girl, and there was no one who was more perfect than this. Natasha’s face, her personality, it was the perfect foil for Jack’s sexy, dark features and his mysterious aura.
“I can’t get into pools.”
“You can’t swim?” Vivienne asked, relieved. “Don’t worry, we can just shoot at the shallow end-”
“No, that’s not it. I can’t get in, at all. Just to my knees, that’s it.” Natasha raised a hand and waved down to someone who had just come out of the school. Vivienne followed her gaze, to the darker-haired boy she had seen at lunch. He was holding a skateboard in his right hand, and he waved back with his left.
“Is he your boyfriend?” Vivienne asked, a touch of hostility in her voice. Natasha looked at her, surprised and shaking her head.
“He’s my best friend, I’ve known him since I was six.”
He walked up to them, not even looking at Vivienne, who bit her lip in irritation. Trust a guy to walk up and interrupt right when she was getting somewhere with Natasha, with her film.
“Sorry. Newspaper meeting.” He said to Natasha.
“It’s alright,” She replied, but before she could continue, Vivienne interjected, holding out her right hand.
“Hey, I’m Vivienne. What’s your name?”
“Evgenii.” He said, shaking Vivienne’s hand, then pulling his back quickly.
“Oh. Where are you from?” Vivienne asked, intrigued. The name was so- non-cookie cutter.
“Russia. We both are.” He said, motioning toward Natasha.
His face was blank, not smiling, not puzzled, but sort of cautious, as he studied Vivienne, who studied him in return.
“Say something in Russian.”
Evgenii bristled at her demand, turning to Natasha and switching to their native language.
“Who is she?”
Natasha shrugged, and responded in Russian; “She wants me to be in her movie.”
“Are you singing?”
“I don’t sing,” She began, but Vivienne interrupted.
“That sounds so great. Maybe I might have you speak in the movie, wouldn’t that be cool? Yeah, I like that. So you guys should come over, I can show you some of my inspirations, you know, the script, my storyboards, all that kind of stuff and we can get take-out-”
“Yeah, sorry, but we can’t.” Evgenii interrupted. Natasha looked at him, surprised by the finality of his tone. Seeing her reaction, he added. “What? We can’t, you have to pick up Svetlana and then we have an essay due on Woman at Point Zero tomorrow.”
Natasha turned to Vivienne, still visibly uneasy at Evgenii’s possessiveness. “Sorry. It’s true. I do have a ton of work due. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
She began to stand. Vivienne grabbed her arm. “Wait.”
She also stood, joining them. “I’ll give you a ride.”
Natasha shook her head. “Sorry, but I can’t leave my bike here.”
Vivienne looked at the fence in the front of the school, where an old pink bicycle was locked with a rusting chain. Evgenii held his skateboard up in one hand and waved a dismissive goodbye as he headed toward the bike. Natasha smiled at Vivienne before heading after him. Vivienne sat again, watching them as Evgenii waited for Natasha to unlock her bike, telling her something. Natasha laughed as she secured her bag and climbed on. Evgenii dropped his skateboard and sped off, in the opposite direction from Vivienne’s house. With a smile and one last wave at Vivienne, Natasha rode after him, picking up speed.
Vivienne watched them ride off into the street, disappearing among the cars. To find her muse and then lose her, lose her to homework, nonetheless, all within three, four hours. No. There was no way, no time to find another actress, someone so quiet and interesting and perfectly contrasting to Jack. It was going to have to be Natasha, she’d have to convince her, yes, and she’d have to win over Evgenii to do it, maybe. But what Vivienne was good at was not settling, it was getting what she wanted. What her film demanded. There was no way she would take this complication and let it ruin her film, make it mediocre. No. No way she was going to let it weaken her idea, her film.
She shoved her script back in her bag and headed off toward the staff-only parking lot, where her car happened to be parked.

10.11.2009

Muse-Auteur Relations. Chapter I.


Muse-Auteur Relations
Chapter I: Jack




Vivienne had cast her male role just the night before she first noticed Natasha, who had always sat in the back of her biology class. Before that day, while the teacher went on and on about the lungs, Vivienne had simply been too busy scribbling notes on her screenplays, and writing character profiles to notice much about the rest of the class.
She’d been trying to cast her leads for weeks now, and it seemed impossible. Now Vivienne was getting in that iffy zone where if she didn’t start shooting soon, she wouldn’t have much time for post production, and Vivienne didn’t like that, because post-production was where she put her films together. To top off the growing pressure of the upcoming deadline (she was making this film for her college application portfolio, after all), the counselor had pulled Vivienne into her office this morning, on her way to Lit.
It was quite an annoying conversation, because the counselor was, once again, trying to persuade Vivienne to apply to other colleges, aside from NYU’s film school. Vivienne had no plans to attend any other schools, so the suggestion did not go over too well. The counselor, seeing that she was losing, then proceeded to pester Vivienne about the state of her film, which she had to submit as part of her creative portfolio in order to be considered for admission into the film school.  Vivienne then had had to admit that she had yet to cast a female lead (which the film happened to center on). The counselor encouraged her to look within the school, possibly go to drama club and check out the girls there, which made Vivienne snort. Even she wasn’t quite sure what she was looking for, she knew for sure that it wasn’t an amateur seventeen year old drama queen who overacted.
What she was looking for was a muse, not an actress. The last thing she wanted was to watch someone walking around pretending to be something they weren’t. The dozens of glossy headshots in her bag were all stills trapping pretty but uninspiring young women who tried too hard to pretend. They were all so stiff, with their painted-on smiles and their vacant, perfectly lit eyes. Vivienne found them clone-like, boring, and completely uninspiring.
What she truly needed was not an actress, but inspiration, in the form of a girl. If she was to be an auteur, then she needed a muse, of course. There was no true artist she knew of that didn’t have at least one awe-inspiring woman to feature in nearly all of his works. But of course, since Vivienne aimed to be the first female auteur of serious cinema, it was only fitting that her muse was male.
Finding an inspirational male had turned out to be quite the task as well, but just last night, Vivienne had managed to find exactly what she’d been waiting for. She’d gone to the Metro, to see her favorite New York-based punk band, and the opening act was a local band, with Jack as the lead singer. As he screamed about the injustices of capitalism, pouring everything he had out into the microphone, Vivienne knew that this was her lead. Aside from his chiseled cheekbones, Vivienne found it utterly enthralling, the way he was straining to pour everything that he had into the song; his sweat, his anger, his vocal chords. Standing there, in the crowd, Vivienne could tell that all she had to do was put his face on a screen and the world would fall to their knees.
After the band finished their set, Vivienne didn’t even bother to stay for the main act. She followed the beautiful boy through the crowd, backstage, past the security. All she had to do was pretend like she belonged there, and Vivienne had grown up at enough backstage areas of all sorts of shows, so that was no problem. She caught him just as he was sitting down with a beer in hand. His shirt was drenched, he had eyeliner smearing and caking in the corners of his eyes.
Vivienne helped herself to a beer also and sat down next to him on the ratty couch. If she’d been any closer, she would have been on top of him. He grinned at her. She did not return the flirty smile.
She simply said, “You should be in my movie.”
He grinned even wider, coming closer. His cheekbones glistened with sweat. As he leaned toward her, Vivienne could smell the cigarettes and beer and sweat clinging to his holey white t-shirt, to his skinny black jeans, to his skin. It was a strong smell, and sort of musty, bur Vivienne found that she didn’t mind it very much at all. In fact, she leaned into him, nearing his mouth, almost touching. Just as he leaned in to kiss her, she spoke.
“Do you have a cigarette?”
He stopped, staring at her, trying to see if this was a joke. He knew he was attractive, he knew dozens of girls in the crowd he’d just preformed in front of would have thrown themselves at him, would have paid good money to be kissed by him backstage.
But Vivienne looked dead serious about the cigarette, and dead amused by his reaction, all at once. He handed her a pack of Marlboro Lights, and she took one and lit it.
“How about we negotiate out back?” She said, but it wasn’t really a question. She grabbed his hand and he followed her, out the back door into the alley, where she leaned against the brick back of the building, looking around at the nearly full moon and the glistening pavement of the alley in the dim streetlights.
“You know, sometimes after it rains, at night, there’s just this feeling, like Chicago just disappears. It turns into Gotham,” She states, and Jack is confused, but he is intrigued, too. Is this why she brought him out here, to tell him of her Batman fantasies?
“Does he ever come to save you?” He asks, leaning alongside her against the old brick.
“Who?” She asks, her eyes soaking in the moon. Her hair is dark, her bangs create dark hallows where her eyes ought to be, hiding them in shadow, which his gaze cannot penetrate. Her lips are beautiful, arrogant, assured, and most of all, alluring.
“Batman,” He said, whispering.
She lets out the smoke from her mouth, and it curls, elegant, before it scatters through the night air. She laughs.
“I don’t need saving.” She says. “I need an actor, for my film.” She shakes her bangs out of her eyes, and her gaze pins him still.
“I need you.”

She is not playing hard to get, Vivienne. The moment he thinks she is only interested in him being in her movie (which he hasn’t quite agreed to, but he knows he’d going to do, and he knows she knows it too), she kisses him, a deep kiss that promises more, much much more, and she leads him to her car, which is parked, in front of a fire hydrant on Clark.
She pulls an orange parking ticket off her windshield, and is inside the car before he has a chance to realize that this girl who dragged him out into the alley, in the middle of the night isn’t just anyone.
“Get in already,” She demands, as he stands on the sidewalk, staring at her car, admiring it. God knows cars aren’t his thing, but this is something special, something he’s never seen before. It’s like the automobile equivilent of his dream vintage Fender.
“Yeah, yeah,” Vivienne says, opening the passenger door for him. “It’s a Thunderbird. Get in.”
Jack obeys. The car is turquoise, and in perfect condition, just the sort of thing movie stars drove in the fifties. As she pulls out, impatiently, Jack feels the night air, humid from the rain, surround him. He doesn’t know who this girl is, or why she’s chose him, or why she is wearing torn jeans and crease-broken Converse and driving a car that costs as much as his childhood home. And he doesn’t know that at that moment his bandmates are packing up the equipment and wondering where the fuck he is, and getting pissed that he’s getting away with not doing his fair share of the work, and they’re jealous, because they know he went off with some hot chick.
And Jack has no fucking clue as to why she’s pulling into the parking lot of the iHop in Boystown. But he knows he that he definitely wants to find out.

Vivienne takes him to iHop, that night and lays it all out on the table; she tells him the shoot dates, she tells him the plot, her method of working, how much she likes improvisation. He tells her he’s never set foot in front of a camera, he’s never acted ever before, not even in the ninth grade play. Mostly because at his school, there was no ninth grade play, because the art class and the drama class got cut with the funding, because not enough people showed up to take those whatever-they-were-called state-wide tests.
But Vivienne doesn’t care, doesn’t care about the explanation, doesn’t care about his lack of experience. The only thing she cares about is that he looks good, he looks very very good, his dark hair falls into his eyes at just the right forty five degree angle, he has just the right amount of piercings (just an industrial running through his cartilage and a lip ring), and his jawline is very well defined. She only cares about how lithe-ly he moves and how long he holds his gaze when he looks her in the eyes, and how good, how beautiful and ethereal this will all look on camera. She can’t wait, she does a screentest, right there and then.
She pulls her 8mm out of her bag, and shoots, knowing that if he looks so right in this crappy 24-hour diner lighting, that he will look good anywhere, any time, any how. He is surprised, he pulls back toward his side of the booth, shrinking away from the camera.
Vivienne smiles. Stage-fright. 
That is something she can work with. After all, she does need at least one challenge to tackle as a director.  

New Story! Muse-Auteur Relations: Synopsis

While I'm working on the first installment of Immortal Childhood, I'm posting the first installment of a different story:

Muse-Auteur Relations
Determined to be the first female film auteur, Vivienne has abandoned her mother's jet-setting life-style in favor of moving to Chicago, where she will sit still for a year, and make a film for her application to NYU's film school. Her search for a muse ends unexpectedly in biology class, where she finds quiet, inquisitive Natasha, whose life and demeanor could not be any more different than Vivienne's. But now that Vivienne has her muse, will she know what to do with her?