A Few Thoughts About 'Halloween Ends (2022)'

This was written as a companion piece to a recent episode of Measuring Flicks on Halloween Ends (2022). It’s a Patreon-exclusive, but for a couple of bucks, you can check it out here. There’s loads of bonus episodes and film reviews over there, but this one was too much fun not to share here as well.


Wow. Just…wow.

Over the past several months, I've been getting emails, DMs, and even texts and phone calls from fans of the show, and friends of mine, all saying essentially the same thing:

"Have you watched Halloween Ends yet? Call me when you do. IT FUCKING SUCKS."

Universally. Nobody chirping in with a "Oh, it's not as bad as everyone says," or, "The cinematography's quite lovely." Just "You're going to hate it," over and over again.

Which makes it sort of difficult, after awhile, to go in with an open mind for a deep-dive episode analyzing and responding to the film. I tried mightily, when I sat down to spin this for the show. I thought I might even pull it off--I do (infamously) love almost everything, after all.

I poured a beer. I hit play.

There are some interesting ideas in the first 15 or 20 minutes of this movie.

This is the worst film in the Halloween franchise, without a doubt.

But in fairness, I wonder if it wasn't doomed from the start, locked in by its very title and position as the closer in yet another unnecessary Cash-Cow Trilogy.

Just as Romero's Night of the Living Dead changed so much in the horror genre forever--some for the better, much for the worse--Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings redefined modern genre filmmaking in much the same Monkey's Paw sort of way: fantastic strides forward in visual effects; genre content, and especially fantasy approached in the mainstream with more serious consideration--elves and ents elevated to, unquestionably, cinematic art, rather than relegated to the quirky, animated dustbin which was once their purview. It seemed a new age of epic fantasy and artistically serious, atmospheric genre work was dawning.

But we were all of us deceived.

The main lesson the film industry seems to have extracted from the success of Jackson's fabulous Trilogy was that when you split a single story into three separate films, you can suck three box offices and three home video revenues and three merchandising runs out one idea. Three video games. Three credits for executive producers. Three tax write-offs. And One Thing To Rule Them All:

The All-Powerful Buck.

The Hobbit, as a book, is barely half the length of The Lord of the Rings (the first book in Tolkien's Rings trilogy). It might have been perfect at an Extended Edition 3:48:00, with plenty of room for songs and barrels in rivers and gorgeous scenery and all the rest. But then there'd only be the one blu-ray to sell. The one ticket. So we got three fluffy, padded, sloppy films, three video games, and a boxed set scarcely worth watching once.

The reason the Lord of the Rings Trilogy works is that the original source material is itself a trilogy. One of the most famously well-written and structured trilogies in the history of storytelling. Three films, each adapting one book, to tell a three-part story, with each individual film receiving deep thought and attention from both the original author and the hardcore fans who came along years later to adapt the work.

Just look at The Matrix. The Matrix is one great movie, well thought-out, incredibly well-written, tightly structured and shot, genre re-defining...and then three "Oh my god did you see how much money we just made do it again do it again" in the wake of the first one. One idea, spread like butter over too much bread, until we don't want any more. The proof in this example is the absolutely brilliant animated compilation film The Animatrix: nine directors each tell their own short, unique stories set in the world of The Matrix using their own storytelling sensibilities, their own animation styles, their own creative energies. Tightly contained stories structured carefully to fit within the time constraints of a short. An excellent entry into The Matrix franchise, because rather than trying to stretch something out into more than it is, everything is pared back to exactly what it is, at its best and most concise.

Name another slasher film franchise that is, or contains, a Trilogy. (Human Centipede isn’t really a slasher—more a body horror or shocksploitation—and even though the second one is the best of the three, the third should be illustrative enough of what I'm talking about.)

Halloween II is a direct sequel to Halloween, and it's great. But then Tommy Lee Wallace came along and made one about Stonehenge and killer toys in Halloween III. Even later in the series, when there are undercurrents and subplots flowing from film to film (the Cult of Thorn thing, for example), the films feel as though they stand alone, with recurring characters and side quests appearing from the wings and disappearing again through trapdoors, leaving the essential elements to be formed and re-formed by different writers, directors, and creative visions, film after film. The feeling is much more akin to single issue comic books or collected trade paperbacks: a creative team picks up a certain set of toys in a certain sandbox, shows you all the cool and interesting things they can do with them, then puts them down again and goes off to do something else, leaving them to be reconfigured and re-imagined by the next creative team to pick them up and make them run and jump and laugh and love and kill.

Oftentimes, the Trilogy format leaves me feeling like there was one amazing idea, and then the studio scooped the afterbirth of that brilliant first film into two jars for general release over the couple years after the first.

With the David Gordon Green Halloween Trilogy, there's almost a sense, structurally, that he was taking the franchise back to the beginning: Halloween is, essentially, a reimagining of Halloween (1978), disguised as a sequel. It's beautiful, powerful, visceral, artistic--one of the better entries into the franchise, in my opinion. Halloween Kills is a direct sequel to Halloween (2018), as Halloween II is to the original. Both sequels spend large amounts of time in a hospital, and both follow Michael's killing spree through Haddonfield as the town at large begins to realize what's happening.

But it's here that the Gordon Green update stumbles, where the original Halloween II doesn't (the Rick Rosenthal-directed 1981 version has both one of the most disturbing deaths in the entire franchise and one of the best stuntman burns either Karl or I have ever seen; if Patreon films were eligible for Quill and Filmies awards, the Halloween II burn would have won stunt of the year, without a doubt). Halloween Kills feels like two movies mashed into the space of one. On one hand, it's a movie absolutely wall-to-wall with obscenely brutal deaths--which is its strongest point. This is why we watch a slasher instead of a haunted house flick or an exorcism movie. Inventive and upsetting murders are one of the subgenre's uncomfortable pleasures, without a doubt, and Kills definitely delivers. Only...

Well…why is Michael Meyers suddenly fighting crowds of people in full-blown action movie sequences? He starts off by killing a baker's dozen of firefighters, then moves on to a carful of would-be vigilantes, and wraps up the film by taking on, oh, twenty or thirty citizens of Haddonfield all armed to the teeth (a fight which starts with Michael totally maskless and almost fully-lit). I joked in the fake trailer for the Measuring Flicks episode on Halloween Kills that Michael was secretly John Wick, but the bleedthrough from high-octane action flicks is palpable in the presentation of violence in Kills. It's revealing that despite the phenomenally high body count racked up in the crowd-killing sequences, the most memorable and affecting deaths in the movie are the two couples that are murdered in their homes, and Michael's brutal murder of Cameron near the end.

That's just the kills, though. Halloween Kills dies by its plot and its writing. Both Kills and Ends are plagued by turgid, purple, throbbing veins of overwriting throughout, the thrust of most of which being hammy, preachy social commentary  about how fear divides us and how hatred makes evil stronger and so on and so forth. The madness of crowds. The power of therapy. Which...I mean, I guess that's all fine, but why cram it all into weird, stilted voiceovers and clunky, awkward dialogue?

"Evil dies tonight?" Really?

Halloween Ends continues the structural rehashing of the original franchise films in numerous ways. Just as in Halloween III, Michael Meyers is barely present; both films feel like they were originally written to be standalone features all their own, and then were hurriedly shoehorned into the Halloween box to buy a little cheap cachet and built-in audience. Halloween III became a cult classic and a delight because it barely has any Halloween in it at all--it essentially is an unrelated film with a few mentions of Haddonfield and a flash of a mask on a dark screen--and so maintains its inherent internal story structure.

Halloween Ends feels so bent and twisted to fit into the Halloween body cast that it's died from internal injuries, despite roll after gauzy roll of nods and nostalgia wrapped all over the fucking thing to remind us all how much we love it:

Corey returns to the house where he killed his first victim (albeit accidentally), as Michael always returns to and sleeps in his childhood home (where he murdered his sister as a child).

Corey standing outside Laurie's window, partially-obscured by a bush, as Michael did by the clotheslines in '78.

Corey appears out of nowhere behind Laurie, as Michael does in...

Wait a minute.

Corey? Who the hell is Corey?

You don't even have to look very hard to see that the cornucopia of nostalgia employed in Halloween Ends has been weaponized and applied not to the film as a whole, or to Michael (who in this film is so weakened and diminished a figure as to be unrecognizable), but to Corey Cunningham, our Gen Z Michael Meyers, in order to legitimize his weird primacy in the film.

We get into it in much more depth in this episode, but my biggest issue with Halloween Ends is this: it doesn't need to be a Halloween story. It isn't, at its core. With the exception of the end of the movie (I won't spoil it, but let's say the last ten or fifteen minutes), this is essentially just the tragic story of a kid who caught a bad break being bullied and ostracized by a small town until he snaps and goes on a killing spree. It's the story of a school shooter, or a mass shooter, or a generic serial killer. Michael Meyers is not a crucial part of this story. Nor is Laurie Strode, or anyone else we've met in any Halloween film outside the trilogy (since most of the OG characters we had left were killed off early and cheap in Kills anyway).

You could remove Michael Meyers and Laurie Strode from this film entirely, replacing them with a generic, aging murderer and a generic survivor of violent crime, and you would get almost exactly the same film.

Halloween Ends is, essentially, We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011), with a Michael Meyers mask on. Or Stephen King's Apt Pupil, only the kid's mom is Laurie Strode for no reason. If you make a narrow-scope science fiction film set on a distant world, and Darth Vader walks through a couple of scenes, have you made a Star Wars movie, or are you just trying to grab a couple extra handfuls of Star Wars money?

The Books I Read (and Heard) in 2021

Having just finished and posted my 2020 Reading List, and gathering from the calendar on the wall of my office that it’s now 2022, and that I should probably not put this one off.

(Also that Mycena interrupta, the Pixie’s Parasol mushroom, is the only species of 500 species of Mycena that is blue, and that the fossil record of this gorgeous little mushroom dates back 180 million years, an unbroken chain linking back to remote prehistory.)

A lot happened in 2021.

Getting these Reading Lists out is part of finally putting some of those things to rest and picking up and carrying on. In the interest of having time enough to Carry On a bit more today: here’s what I read last year. As always, titles in Bold are audiobooks. The rest are the physical page-turners.

Maximum Bob (Elmore Leonard)
The Cutie (Donald E. Westlake)
A Scanner Darkly (Philip K. Dick)
— (Read by Paul Giamatti, I highly recommend it. He’s fabulous.)
Red Dragon (Thomas Harris)
Snuff (Terry Pratchett)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 1 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 2 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 3 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 4 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 5 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 6 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 7 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 8 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 9 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 10 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 11 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 12 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
Hikaru No Go Vol. 13 (Yumi Hotta and Takeshi Obata)
On Writing (Stephen King)
The Stand (Stephen King)
Just After Sunset (Stephen King)
Batman: Year One (Frank Miller and David Mazzuchelli)
Batman and Son (Grant Morrison)
The Black Casebook (Various)
Batman: The Resurrection of Ra’s al Ghul (Various)
Batman: The Black Glove (Grant Morrison)
Batman: R.I.P. (Grant Morrison)
Final Crisis (Grant Morrison)
Neverwhere (Neil Gaiman)
Captain America: Man Out of Time (Mark Waid, Jorge Molina)
I, The Jury (Mickey Spillane)
Captain America: Winter Soldier (Ed Brubaker)
Monstrous Regiment (Terry Pratchett)
Queen and Country Vol 1: Operation Broken Ground (Greg Rucka)
Queen and Country Vol 2: Operation Morningstar (Greg Rucka)
Queen and Country Vol 3: Operation Crystal Ball (Greg Rucka)
The Golden Apples of the Sun (Ray Bradbury)
The Refrigerator Monologues (Catherynne M. Valente)
Best Horror of the Year Vol. 10 (ed. Ellen Datlow)
Jimmy the Kid (Donald E. Westlake)
A Stir of Echoes (Richard Matheson)
Sin City: The Hard Goodbye (Frank Miller)
The Tao of Pooh (Benjamin Hoff)
Star Trek: Voyager: Mosaic (Jeri Taylor)
(Written by one of the show writers, read by Kate Mulgrew.)
10% Happier (Dan Harris)
The Outsider (Stephen King)
(Read by Will Patton. One of King’s best.)

46. Mostly comics and audiobooks.

Honestly?

It was a great year for reading. So many of these were excellent. The last four in particular stick in my mind, not just because they’re the end of the list, but because those were the first four books I read in a world where my grandma Linda wasn’t there to call and talk to about them, and each helped me, in their own way, to understand that the act of reading itself is communication, of communion between the living, and, sometimes—as when we read Dickens or Poe or Westlake, or Matheson, or Bradbury—with the dead.

They’re great books. Books are great.

I’m going to go get back to the one I’m reading, now, actually, before I get too far into this cup of tea.

A lot has happened so far, in 2022. I’ll be back soon. Tell you all about it.

—m.

The Books I Read (and Heard) in 2020

2020 lives strangely in my memory, a feeling like a year with a broken spine, the early hopes of the year staring down in horror at the dead and dangling months below March. In the interest of honesty, I’m writing this italicized bit at the top in 2022—nearly a year after I wrote what follows—and I’m shocked by how my memory of these books shifts after the moment the lockdowns started. I remember all of the books I read before the Pandemic hit: Kitty Genovese, one of the best true crime books I’ve read since In Cold Blood. The Talisman, Stephen King and Peter Straub doing their wickedest Mark Twain impression by way of The Lord of the Rings. The Filth, Grant Morrison at his brain-bending finest, a beautiful exploration of the power of creativity, and the dangers. A Widow’s Story, one of the most honest memoirs of grief after loss I’ve ever read. Ever.

(Joyce Carol Oates is absolutely incredible. If you’ve never read anything of hers, try one of her novels. See how she finesses the knife between your ribs and nicks open your heart. A Widow’s Story is great, but I recommend Blonde (a fictionalized biography of Marilyn Monroe) or The Garden of Earthly Delights if you’re new to her work.)

Snow Crash is one of the wildest cyberpunk sci-fi novels I’ve ever read. It’s long. It’s prescient. It’s cool, and stylish, and violent, and all too plausible, on a long enough timeline. Neal Stephenson immediately became one of my favorite writers on reading Snow Crash. You’ll see another of his, Zodiac, later in this list. The same day I finished that book, I ordered a copy and sent it to my dad.

Neal Stephenson rules.

I finished out the live part of 2020 with a long slew of crime novels and detective fiction—it was around this time that the idea for the dystopian sci-fi crime-noir horror novel I’m working on currently started to bubble in the back of my mind, and so I inundated myself with three masters, to get the beats, patter, and patois of the genre back in my head. It’s not even just these books: I wholeheartedly recommend you go seek out and ravenously consume everything you can get your hands on by Elmore Leonard, Richard Stark (who is secretly Donald E. Westlake, who is near-peerless, and whose words echo from the fingertips of all who came after him), and James Ellroy.

The Maltese Falcon needs no explanation. It’s legendary. It’s better than they tell you it is. Dashiell Hammett didn’t write many novels during his lifetime; it’s easy to read them all. You should do that.

V for Vendetta.

V for Vendetta.

I repeated it to catch at your attention, to jar you from the flow of reading. Listen to me: if you read nothing else on this list—if you read nothing else, period—read V for Vendetta. Don’t watch the movie and think you’re getting the same thing. You aren’t.

Not even fucking close.

I like the movie fine. I’ve seen it a couple of times, and it’s definitely fine. I’m not coming at the flick—it’s better than the fans of the comic made it out to be when it first came out—but comparing the movie to the comic is like saying a set of Hulk Gloves on a ten-year-old is equivalent to Mike Tyson in his prime, with murder in his heart and a head full of methamphetamine.

(They might not walk so far as I, but I suspect even the Wachowskis would allow that the comic is leagues beyond their adaptation: their love of the source material is obvious in the film, and many of the deleterious elements of the flick feel like studio pressure to “make it more like The Matrix.”)

One more time. I’m not fucking around, here: V for Vendetta, written by Alan Moore, illlustrated by David Lloyd, is one of the best books ever written. Not comic books, not “dystopian fiction,” not “one of the best by a British blah blah blah.”

No qualifications. No caveats.

V for Vendetta is a masterpiece. It’s the sort of book that will rewire your head. I read it for the first time when I was 13 years old. I’ve read it probably twenty or thirty times since then. I’ve given away three copies. I’ll probably give away half a dozen more.

That said. It’s a weird book to read right before March 2020. Believe me. You’ll see.

But I’ll turn all that over to past Max. He’s got this whole other thing going on. After all, he’s a year away, and a different man than I am, as the guy who writes to tell you all about his books next year will be unrecognizably me, and someone else entirely. It’s something I’m learning about being alive. A slow lesson, but instructive, and liberating.

Here’s what I wrote last year about what I read the year before, and never published before now.

—m.

Kitty Genovese (Kevin Cook)
Smoke and Mirrors (Neil Gaiman)
The Talisman (Stephen King)
The Hunger, and Other Stories (Charles Beaumont)
The Filth (Grant Morrison)
Big Sur (Jack Kerouac)
A Widow’s Story (Joyce Carol Oates)
Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson)
The Yage Letters (William S. Burroughs)
Get in the Van (Henry Rollins)
V for Vendetta (Alan Moore)
Mr. Majestyk (Elmore Leonard)
The Rare Coin Score (Richard Stark)
The Big Nowhere (James Ellroy)
The Green Eagle Score (Richard Stark)
The Black Ice Score (Richard Stark)
The Maltese Falcon (Dashiell Hammett)

According to my list, The Maltese Falcon was the last book I read (listened to, as it happens) before the COVID-19 Pandemic came and crashed down over the world. I was talking with a friend a couple weeks ago, about how nobody talks about the early weeks and months of the Pandemic anymore. Now that more and more people are being vaccinated, and more businesses, cities, and states are reopening, there seems to be a general tendency among us to chuckle and shrug.

What a crazy year we had, hey? Wild times, wild times. Say, want to go grab a beer?

I worked straight through the pandemic. Essential Worker. Someone’s gotta haul the shit off the trucks. What I remember, mostly, is unloading pallets of computers, cases of paper, and back-to-school supplies with a bandana tied around my mouth and nose while maskless truck drivers stood a few feet away from me in unventilated semi trailers, telling me about the best places to go Squatch-Spotting, about how finally there was someone with some sense at the wheel in Washington, about the time they took a couple shots at a UFO that buzzed their rig while they were pissing in the dust forty miles west of Vegas. I remember a cell phone video one of my friends sent from New York City, of bodies being buried in mass graves. I remember barren grocery stores with shelves denuded of toilet paper, canned goods, dry goods, and anything with even a spritz of bleach in the bottle or “Kills” or “Viruses” on the label, masked shoppers skirting the walls like refugees moving through a war zone, maskless shoppers crowding in on them (and me) shouting about Sheep and Truth and Lies and Freedom.

I remember the fear. The fear was bad, through 2020. The rage and uncertainty, the sense of unraveling, of doom, of thinness. No one talks about that, anymore, that sense that what we’d all thought of as the Bedrock of Civilization was actually no more than translucent gossamer, a silk scarf hung over the mouth of the cave to obscure the howling dark outside.

Remembering the dark, I wonder.

(We now return you to the Reading List you’re reading:)

The Black Dahlia (James Ellroy)
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft (Stephen King)
The Sour Lemon Score (Richard Stark)
Brokeback Mountain (Annie Proulx)
Deadly Edge (Richard Stark)
Lost Girls (Alan Moore, Melinda Gebbie)
A Midsummer Night’s Dream (William Shakespeare)
Saint Thomas Aquinas (G.K. Chesterton)
Henry VI Part I (William Shakespeare)
Hellblazer Vol. 1: Original Sins (Jamie Delano)
The Comedy of Errors (William Shakespeare)
The Tempest (William Shakespeare)
Henry VI Part II (William Shakespeare)
The Ocean at the End of the Lane (Neil Gaiman)
Sailing to Byzantium (Robert Silverberg)
The Prestige (Christopher Priest)
Perchance to Dream: Selected Stories (Charles Beaumont)
Hellblazer Vol. 2: The Devil You Know (Jamie Delano)
Zodiac (Neal Stephenson)
Web of the City (Harlan Ellison)
The Moving Finger (Agatha Christie)
Better Than Sex (Hunter S. Thompson)
.diane arbus. (Diane & Doon Arbus)
Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail, ‘72 (Hunter S. Thompson)
The Dangerous Alphabet (Neil Gaiman)
The Tragical Comedy or Comical Tragedy of Mr. Punch (Neil Gaiman, Dave McKean)
The Punisher Max Vol. 1: In the Beginning (Garth Ennis)
The Punisher Max Vol. 2: Kitchen Irish (Garth Ennis)
The Punisher Max Vol. 3: Mother Russia (Garth Ennis)
The Punisher Max Vol. 4: Up is Down, Black is White (Garth Ennis)
The Punisher Max Vol. 5: The Slavers (Garth Ennis)

Forty-eight books. Most of them audiobooks, listened to in the long pre-dawn hours moving freight at the job I was working back when the world first got knocked off its pin (I requested the early shift, four a.m. to noon, to limit my exposure to the public; they’re also quiet hours, pleasantly conducive to keeping your head down and listening to stories). I listened in the car on my way to and from work (or, on Sundays, to Meijer for sushi breakfast, which became a strange sort of ritual for me through April, May, and June of 2020, before I left the pallet jacks behind and started working at Left Foot Charley), and while I did the dishes, and vacuumed the house, and walked the dogs, and while I did nothing at all.

Forty-eight. My goal, back when I started keeping track of my reading, several years ago, was to get my pace up to 70 books a year. My reading lists have been shrinking these past couple. I’m going to have to haul ass this year to get my literary shit in shape, especially since I decided to start The Stand in March. I’m barely on page 600…

—m.

Marlon

There's a group of people in my life who all share a question between them. Each time we get together, somewhere into the third round of drinks, or the closing minutes of the phone call, they all ask me the same question, their expressions a shuffle of love, regret, and hope as they ask. None of them ever ask with malice. Not really. Here's the question:

"What's going on with Marlon?"

I love them for it. For six years they've asked me this, and for six years I've had nothing better to give them than "Nothing," and a sad little laugh. I've been stuck a long time, and too worn out to drag the project up out of the mire.

Still no soundtrack. Still no score. Stuck.

They nod, these people who feature in all the best memories of my life--Sitzy and Mariah and John and Tyler, Renowned FRT Actor Adam Lowe, and Stephen with his endless Natural American Spirits and his Russian literature--and we shake our heads, and we laugh and say goodnight, or have another drink.

And each time they ask me when or whether I'll ever finish the horror movie we shot in the winter of 2014, I think, "They had as much fun as me. They loved it like I did." Every time, it makes me want to finish the thing, because goddamn it, we had a good time making it, and because I want to do it again.

But another drink, another day: someday. After all, still no soundtrack. Still no score.

Stuck.

Until two days ago, when my brother handed me a 60 GB flash drive with nearly all of the raw studio audio from the Marlonsoundtrack and score recording sessions in the summer of 2015. The missing piece of track that derailed my little indie horror movie all those years ago.

I'll be completely honest with you: I honestly, sincerely believed that these sessions didn't even exist anymore.

Some of you have no idea what I'm talking about. After all, this is all years ago, in a different city farther north, in a golden age.

Let me go back.

When I was 23 years old, I wrote a screenplay for a film called Marlon.

Back then, I listened to Kevin Smith's podcast Smodcastreligiously. One day, at the Chophouse where I worked, Brandon (a buddy of mine and fellow fan of Smith) asked if I'd listened to the latest episode. I hadn't.

"It's Episode 259: The Walrus and the Carpenter. Listen to it, and let's talk tomorrow."

Those of you familiar with the film Tuskmight recognize the name of the episode. In the podcast, Smith and his best friend/cohost riff off a strange news story and come up with an absolutely buck-wild concept for a horror film. You can hear the moment Smith decided he was going to actually make the movie. It's awesome, in both senses of the word: the moment of inspiration that would eventually become one of the most twisted and unique horror films of the past twenty years captured on tape, so to speak. To me, it was like listening to magic.

The next night, between tables, drinking top-shelf scotch out of coffee cups, Brandon said, "I think you should write Tusk. You just finished that other script, right? So you're all warmed up. Write it really fast, before Kev gets around to writing it, and send it to him, and if he likes it, maybe he directs it, and you've got your 'in' to Hollywood."

Older now, looking back: never in a million years. Steal an artist's idea out from under him, the idea being to do it better than he can, and try to leverage a career in screenwriting out of it? I suppose it's a matter of perspective. Still...

23-year-old me absolutely loved the idea.

It's funny the way things happen, and sometimes it's better not to know what the rules are, and just start playing.

The next morning, in the shower, clear as day, my favorite scene from Marlonjust fell into my head from somewhere, whole and clear as day: a well-dressed man with long greasy hair, sitting on the edge of another man's bed, smoking a cigar in the middle of the night, in the middle of nowhere. The other man is asleep, until the smoke wakes him up. The man with the greasy hair sits quiet and unmoving until he's positive the sleeper is awake. Then the well-dressed man tells the groggy man in the bed that his mother died in the night, died horribly, screaming, and in pain.

Except she hadn't, really. The guy with the stogie just thought it was funny.

I'd been writing for a couple hours when Brandon texted me from work. Smith was already working on the script, had set aside other projects to focus on making his whimsy a reality. (And he did--Tusk started principal photography just a year later, if memory serves. At any rate, it got made, and it's fucking excellent.) He was writing it, and wouldn't need a spare.

But it didn't matter. The movie I was writing didn't require a walrus, or Kevin Smith. Just a remote place in a harsh wilderness, where a handful of damaged people could unravel together. I kept writing.

When I'd written somewhere around 70 pages, Bird said, "What if you just made it yourself?" I'd been griping about the apparently impenetrable wall between the newcomer and the Film Industry, worried I wasn't going to be able to sell it.

"So don't. Just make it yourself. What is it, a cabin in the woods and a couple murders? Some blood? What's the cast, like four people?"

"Six."

"If it was sixty, we know, like, everyone in the theater department." It was mid-afternoon. I remember her smile, and the way the little apartment looked exactly. It was the moment that led to the movie, and the movie...

...everyone should make a movie, especially with their friends, and especiallyif it's vulgar and obscenely violent.

My god, did we have fun.

With the help of an amazing, hilarious mishmash of good friends and new friends and strangers who became friends, I raised some money, I bought cameras and lenses and professional audio equipment, built DIY boom mics, fig rigs and shoulder rigs and a pretty awesome steadicam out of PVC pipe, electrical conduits, washers, and a handful of nuts and bolts. And then we made a movie. We shot the whole script, and I cut, corrected, and color graded the flick on Bird's then-new iMac. It came out around 90 minutes. It looked great (or good, maybe; I'm obviously biased, but I think we shot the shit out of it for a bunch of young twenty-somethings brimful of piss and vinegar), and we had a blast. When it was all over, and we were going our separate ways, most of the people who worked on the movie with me told me to call if I ever did it again. If I did, they were in.

I wish I'd made three more with that crew by now.

But it wasn't easy.

The long and extremely erratic hours of principal photography put a massive strain on my relationship with Bird, to whom I'd only been married about a year. I'd leave for day exteriors at 6 a.m., and get home from interior night shoots at...6 a.m. sometimes. Otherwise, I was working, or working on Marlonin my head. On the financial side, between touching personal accounts to cover when we busted the budget near the end of shooting and the months of dumping shifts to shoot, the movie pretty much cleaned me out.

(I'd do it again tomorrow. That's sort of the plan, actually.)

Once filming was finished, and the cast had dispersed back into the real world--Chicago, Colorado, New York City--all that was left was to cut, score, and soundtrack the thing. I had it cut in a month, and wrote the soundtrack and score the same month, in the little pockets of time I wasn't editing in. I got my brother onboard (Sam's an insanely talented drummer, and by far my favorite musician), found a miraculous connection to a professional recording studio, and over the course of a month, Sam and I recorded an album. Not a "couple of mics in a buddy's basement" kind of album, but an actual, no-shit, "drums-in-isolation-room, $6,000-ribbon-mic-on-the-tube-amp" kind of album.

The recording sessions felt like a possession. Sam had only ever played--or even heard--one of the songs before we recorded the album. I would play him the guitar part a couple times through, and then we would just GO. Essentially, depending how you want to look at it, Sam either improvised an entire album, or wrote an entire album's worth of drum parts on the fly, memorizing them as he made them up in order to replicate them almost flawlessly take after take.

I found out this past weekend that those sessions were one of the last times my brother played drums. It broke my heart. I don't know if I can explain to people who weren't there, not just at the sessions in Escanaba, but all through our childhood: there is perhaps no better place to be than in a loud room, making music with my brother. I think the reason I understand him so well, the reason our relationship is so different than other brothers--Sam's drumming is like listening to his soul, and I spent half my life playing along with it. In Escanaba, we caught a furious hour of it on magnetic tape, true ferocity, utter eloquence: some of the best drumming Sam ever did.

So when all that music vanished, it was pretty hard on us.

I won't get into it here. Somewhere, someday, I'll tell the whole story out. In short, post-production on the album started out promisingly, but quickly turned to crickets. I had a hard time getting answers, and though there was a lot of optimism, there seemed to be very little progress. After a month of sitting on my hands, I started working on some other writing projects--another screenplay, sparse and probably pretty cheap to shoot, which I half imagined as the movie I would shoot after Marlonwas done--and waited.

For various reasons--bad intel, let's say, and a growing feeling of exhaustion, the creative equivalent of "I'm just gonna rest my eyes for a minute"--I waited a year. Bird and I moved to Maine. The movie was faltering, losing momentum.  The tentacular rhythms of normal life were coiling around my legs, sucking me back down. If I could just get the...

Then two of the people I loved most in the world died, and up was down, black was white, and I didn't want to look at the movie anymore.

The vast majority of it was shot at my Uncle Walter's place out in the woods on 581 just outside of Ishpeming, where my brother and I carried his body out of my grandmother's house a few years ago. He never got to see the movie we shot around and inside his day-to-day life. He cooked for us, hung out with us as we shot, and hated the smell of the goddamn cigars. He taught us how to run the gennie that powered the place so we could shoot there when he wasn't around, asked us to stoke the stove before we left (which was usually around three in the morning) so he wouldn't freeze to death, and showed my crew where the guns were hidden, in case the wrong people came around. I loved him immensely, and cherish every second of the plus two months I spent out there, shooting the movie. Uncle Walt loved that we were out there, that his place was a horror movie set. He loved the cameras, and the seriousness with which the cast approached the project. I loved him.

He never got to see it.

That's been pretty hard, too.

Let's fast forward.

Bird and I moved again, back to Michigan. I met Karl, we started Measuring Flicks. I wrote some other stuff. Then COVID.

Then it was a month ago, and my brother called me. After working as a banker for several long and miserable years, Sam dumped the money-obsessed corporate job that was slowly whittling his soul down to an unfeeling stub, and joined the Electrician's Union. (He swore in a couple weeks ago. He's happier than I've seen him in...well, since the day he started working at that stunted, shitty, soulless bank. Seeing him happy lightens the weight of my world as well.)

"Bro," he said. "You're never going to fucking believe it."

I was at work when he called. I ducked into the kitchen, off the tasting room floor. I never ignore a phone call from my brother, because I love him, and because he's the one who calls me when really bad things happen. I've never known if that's his choice, or if it's a role the family's put on him, but when there's hard news, it's Sam that tells it to me. I've always been grateful that it's so.

"Believe what?" I asked.

He told me. I didn't believe him. I didn't believe him, really, until my phone dinged while I was talking with him, and I saw that Shadd, one of the sound engineers from the Marlonrecording sessions, had texted me a Google Drive link. Then I went and found a quiet corner in the cellar of the winery I work at these days and cried.

Sam was talking with his foreman on their lunch break. Sam's foreman is way into music, and, having found out that Sam was a drummer, asked if he'd ever recorded anything. Sam told him yeah, at a pro studio in Escanaba, but the sessions had been lost. The foreman asked if Sam meant the studio Shadd worked at. Sam, surprised, agreed that it had been, yeah.

"Well, Shadd's the plumber on this jobsite," said Sam's foreman. "He's standing about forty feet behind you."

Sam turned around, and there was Shadd.

Shadd had everything, and he handed it to Sam on a 60-gig flash drive. Last Sunday, Sam handed it to me.

Again, the story of how and why the album recording sessions stayed buried so long is totally fucked. There are many circumstances--some appear extenuating, some inexcusable--that need to be disentangled, parsed, and considered before I write at length about them. Honestly, having just heard the album for the first time since my brother and I wrote and recorded it, I don't even really care: I have my music back, and some of a younger era of my soul along with it. It feels like a coming again of hope and potential.

But, as goes the old saw: "What's going on with Marlon?"

It's been a long time since I was set up to work on a movie. The hand-me-down iMac I originally edited Marlonon (which I now use exclusively to cut Measuring Flicks) is too old to run the latest Final Cut Pro. I've got Reaper on there, for the podcast, but professional audio mixing (film audio edits and mixing and mastering a score, say) requires a bit of a bigger boat, and my ornery old overheating iMac won't cut it for this kind of shark hunt.

Here's where I'm at:

Between the two of us, Karl and I have a decent chunk of change to put toward a new computer with all the necessary Bells and Whistles. We're about a grand shy at this point, but have a couple ways forward--there's income coming from this Patreon (actually accounting for a sizeable chunk of what we already have), and we've been talking about doing a t-shirt for seasons, now. We've been eyeing a new studio computer for the past year or so anyway: there are a few film projects, an album, a few radio plays...but now that I have the Marlonstudio recording sessions, I seem to have both a damn good rock/metal/country/folk/alternative album and a mostly-finished feature-length horror film within a year of completion.

Only for real this time.

There's also a little more to do on the album--all of the guitar solos and some of the vocals were recorded at a second location, and so weren't in with the session backups I got from the studio in Escanaba.

I'm okay with it. I'm a better guitarist now than I was back then. (Not that I was some slouch when we recorded the album--I've really enjoyed rediscovering my playing style from all those years ago, these past few days.) However good I remember those solos being, I was never happy with how they were recorded, actually--the solos were tracked digitally, with me playing my guitar directly into the computer in the studio, into an amp simulator. I remember them sounding great the day we tracked them (I never heard them again), but it always bothered me that they never got to breathe. They went straight from my strings into the computer, cheated of their one good wail as sound waves in the real world. Call me analog or superstitious, but in a way, it's a relief that the solos that'll end up on the album (and in the movie) will have lived and died on the lips of a cranked tube amplifier in an isolation room, rather than as muted plinks in a bedroom studio.

So.

That's what's going on with Marlon.

I've been writing this for days, so I'm going to put it to rest and go to bed. There'll be lots more, trust me. In the meantime, the song at the top of the post is called "Killing Jar." I wrote it when I was 22 years old, a year before I wrote the script for Marlon. I think it might be the best song I've ever written. I forgot how to play it, after we tracked the album. I've been trying to pick it back out by ear for six years. Now I have a recording of my brother and I playing it together.

It's been a very, very good week for me. I hope yours has been as good as mine. I hope all of you feel the way I feel right now. I wish I could share some of it with you. I hope I have.

--Max

The Books I Read (and Heard) in 2019

53. Fifty-three. Firty-three.

Damn. Five short of even a tie. Ah, well. I’m already off to a good start this year (I highly recommend Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson; it’s one of the best science fiction novels I’ve read in ages), and I read some truly excellent books during this most recent whirl around the sun.

The best six, for instance. This was the year I discovered Alan Moore’s astoundingly brilliant Swamp Thing—six volumes of absolutely the best writing, comics or otherwise, I’ve ever consumed (or, as was the case with this series, been consumed by). The story ranges from horror to fantasy to science fantasy and back again. Moore’s writing is glorious in its moods and fevers. It’s the sort of book that you believe, once you’ve read it—unto the point of mania—that everyone else in the world should read it, too. I got all six volumes from my local library. Chances are wonderful that you can, too. The first volume wraps up the threads of the story arc that came before. The next five volumes change your head forever.

2019 was the year I discovered the raucous nihilism of Charles Bukowski, and the beautiful neuroses of Charlie Kaufman (the library had the screenplay to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, too; they really do have everything).

Final Girls, by Riley Sager was exactly what I needed to be reading when I read it: bloody and a little trashy and riveting. Jonathan Carroll’s Bones of the Moon got into my sentences for almost a month. Grant Morrison and Dave McKean’s Arkham Asylum got into my nightmares. (As did The Hellbound Heart. I’ve been a Hellraiser fan since I was a kid, but I’d never read the novella it’s based on. There’s a certain bleak, erotic hedonism to the book that the films lack.)

And I discovered my new favorite Stephen King novel, Pet Sematary. One of the most beautiful and disturbing books I’ve ever read. Outside of The Shining, this feels the most personal, to me. It’s a disquieting book; I thought about it whenever it was out of my hands until it was done.

If I don’t stop now, I’ll just tell you about all of them, and I’ve got books to read. So, without further ado, it’s…

Max’s Magnificent 2019 Reading List! (Audiobooks in bold.)

Gunsights (Elmore Leonard)
The Law at Randado (Elmore Leonard)
Last Stand at Saber River (Elmore Leonard)
The Grifters (Jim Thompson)
Post Office (Charles Bukowski)
Love is a Dog from Hell (Charles Bukowski)
Save the Cat! (Blake Snyder)
Hollywood (Charles Bukowski)
Blue is the Warmest Color (Julie Maroh)
The 39 Steps (John Buchan)
The Best American Erotica 2001 (Various, Ed. Susie Bright)
The Seventh (Richard Stark)
The Ambler Warning (Robert Ludlum)
The Handle (Rchard Stark)
You Are a Badass (Jen Sincero)
And the Hippoes Were Boiled in Their Tanks (Jack Kerouac & William S. Burroughs)
After the First Death (Lawrence Block)
Junky (William S. Burroughs)
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Charlie Kaufman)
The Comedy is Finished (Donald E. Westlake)
You Could Call it Murder (Lawrence Block)
Words are My Matter (Ursula K. Le Guin)
Final Girls (Riley Sager)
Bones of the Moon (Jonathan Carroll)
Storey’s Guide to Keeping Honeybees (Malcolm T. Sanford & Richard E. Bonney)
Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth (Grant Morrison)
At the Mountains of Madness (H.P. Lovecraft)
The Abolition of Man (C.S. Lewis)
The Saga of the Swamp Thing Volume 1 (Alan Moore)
The Saga of the Swamp Thing Volume 2 (Alan Moore)
The Saga of the Swamp Thing Volume 3 (Alan Moore)
The Saga of the Swamp Thing Volume 4 (Alan Moore)
The Saga of the Swamp Thing Volume 5 (Alan Moore)
The Saga of the Swamp Thing Volume 6 (Alan Moore)
The Early Stories of Philip K. Dick (Philip K. Dick)
Pet Sematary (Stephen King)
Top 10 (Alan Moore)
Top 10: The Forty-Niners (Alan Moore)
Smax (Alan Moore)
Hawaiian Dick: Byrd of Paradise (B. Clay Moore)
The View from the Cheap Seats (Neil Gaiman)
The Airtight Garage (Moebius)
Tell-All (Chuck Palahniuk)
The Hellbound Heart (Clive Barker)
Doom Patrol Volume 1 (Grant Morrison)
Doom Patrol Volume 2 (Grant Morrison)
Doom Patrol Volume 3 (Grant Morrison)
Doom Patrol Volume 4 (Grant Morrison)
Doom Patrol Volume 5 (Grant Morrison)
Doom Patrol Volume 6 (Grant Morrison)
Presto: How I Made Over 100 Pounds Disappear and Other Magical Tales (Penn Jillette)
A Grief Observed (C.S. Lewis) 

###

Not too shabby.

—Max