Showing posts with label Toros and Torsos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toros and Torsos. Show all posts

Thursday, September 14, 2017

HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL: “REAL CHARACTERS” #3 ORSON WELLES

The Hector Lassiter novels (ten of them, including HEAD GAMES) frequently incorporate real people.

All of that carries over into HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, coming Oct. 24, 2017 from First Second Books.


The range of “real characters” is prodigious, from the real-life personalities who dominate some of those books’ action, to those real people who are, well, fleeting, yet still influential.

Some are famous, some are even infamous. 

Some are little known to the wider public, yet they affected the course of history and the Lassiter series sometimes aims to give these historical ghosts their proper due.


To give a little bonus context to those “characters” who appear in HEAD GAMES: THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, we’re delving into each, here and there, over successive Thursdays…




Novelist/screenwriter Hector Lassiter has two primary “real-life” sidekicks throughout the 10-volume Lassiter series: novelist Ernest Hemingway, and filmmaker, amateur magician and actor Orson Welles.



Of the two, Welles is—no pun intended—a larger presence in HEAD GAMES, where we meet the struggling auteur striving to complete filming of his quirky classic film noir (some would argue the last true film noir made in the United States), TOUCH OF EVIL.

We visit the set of TOUCH OF EVIL in Venice California, a once-popular and ritzy community (it actually boasted water-filled canals for a time eons ago), but since fallen on such hard times that Welles is using it to convincingly double for an über seedy, Tijuana-style Mexican border town named “Los Robles.”


We are present for the shooting of the film’s signature opening scene, a bravura, brashly long tracking shot ending in the explosion of a bomb we see placed in a car trunk at the scene’s opening. (The most recent James Bond film, Spectre, paid tribute to this shot in its own long-tracking shot homage, set in Mexico, during the 007 film’s pre-credits sequence.)







In addition to directing and having rewritten the script for TOUCH OF EVIL, Welles also acted in the film, playing Captain Hank Quinlan, a badly widowed man who is a slave to his waistline-expanding addictions (“It’s either the candy or the hooch” he growls to Marlene Dietrich) and notorious for not being above deftly framing the actual perp if it will clear a case in absence of actual evidence.


In addition to HEAD GAMES, we meet younger, more successful versions of Welles in the Hector Lassiter novels THE GREAT PRETENDER (which covers the War of the World’s Panic Broadcast of 1938, as well as Welles’ filming of the classic noir, The Third Man).




Welles is also a key player in TOROS & TORSOS, where we find Orson directing his earlier, still quirkier film noir, THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI, and becoming a person of supreme and dire interest in the grisly murder of would-be actress Elizabeth Short, better known through tabloid headlines as the Black Dahlia, whose 1949 murder remains officially unsolved to this day, in face of a multitude of True Crime paperbacks, each more than a bit dubiously claiming to reveal her true murderer.





Next time: CHARLETON HESTON



THE HECTOR LASSITER SERIES, AS PUBLISHED BY BETIMES BOOKS:


ONE TRUE SENTENCE: Paperback/eBook

FOREVER'S JUST PRETEND: Paperback/eBook

TOROS & TORSOS: Paperback/eBook

THE GREAT PRETENDER: Paperback/eBook

ROLL THE CREDITS: Paperback/eBook

THE RUNNING KIND: Paperback/eBook

HEAD GAMES: Paperback/eBook



PRINT THE LEGEND: Paperback/eBook/audio

DEATH IN THE FACE: Paperback/eBook

THREE CHORDS & THE TRUTH: Paperback/eBook

Thursday, September 7, 2017

HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL: “REAL CHARACTERS” #2 ERNEST HEMINGWAY

The Hector Lassiter novels (ten of them, including HEAD GAMES) frequently incorporate real people.

All of that carries over into HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, coming Oct. 24, 2017 from First Second Books.


The range of “real characters” is prodigious, from the real-life personalities who dominate some of those books’ action, to those real people who are, well, fleeting, yet still influential.

Some are famous, some are even infamous. 

Some are little known to the wider public, yet they affected the course of history and the Lassiter series sometimes aims to give these historical ghosts their proper due.


To give a little bonus context to those “characters” who appear in HEAD GAMES: THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, we’re delving into each, here and there, over successive Thursdays…




Revolutionary Modernist/fiction stylist, journalist, big game hunter, sports fisherman and an icon of 20th Century American masculinity:

More than half-a-century gone, Ernest Hemingway still requires scant introduction.

Along with Orson Welles, he’s the most dominant historical figure in the Hector Lassiter series.

Although not an on-the-page character in real-time in HEAD GAMES: THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, Hemingway looms over the book as a kind of larger-than-life, émeinence grise.



Longtime friends dating back to Hemingway and Hector’s teens along the Italian front as ambulance drivers, Hemingway or “Hem” as he’s mostly referred to in the Lassiter novels, also appears in ONE TRUE SENTENCE.

In that novel, we see Hector and Hem as young, expatriate aspiring novelists, both struggling to hone their craft and make a name amongst the Left Bank literati that included such diverse Modernist figures as Gertrude Stein, James Joyce and Williams Carlos Williams.

Hem next surfaces in TOROS & TORSOS, where we find Hector and Hem both living in 1930s Key West, Florida, now established writers, but becoming increasingly competitive about their respective success. (Or, at least, Hem is feeling the competition, and bitterly so...one of his more unattractive, real-life traits, alas.)

A grisly murder mirroring a famous work of surrealist painting sets the two off on a Holmes and Watson-style investigation that will span decades and continents, stretching from Florida, to Civil War-era Spain, to Cuba in the earliest days of Fidel Castro.




Hem also makes a cameo appearance in the novel ROLL THECREDITS, set during World War II and also during a period of bitter estrangement between Hem and Hector.

A couple of TOROS & TORSOS Easter eggs are in the graphic novel that didn’t make the original words-only HG novel: We get a brief glimpse of a fist-fight between the two writers that punctuates their long split. 

Also, if you look closely, you’ll get a glimpse of a certain surrealist nude self-portrait by a sexy female artist key to T&T’s plot and the Hec-Hem split.

This all sets the table for Hem’s last Hector Lassiter series appearance, in PRINT THE LEGEND, a novel about FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover’s detestable war on writers—particularly on Hemingway—throughout much of the 20th Century. 

Chronologically, HEAD GAMES unfolds between the Spanish section of TOROS & TORSOS, and just a bit before Hector’s looming reconciliation with Hem that will take him to Cuba, just a couple of years before Hemingway’s death, in Ketchum, Idaho, in July 1961.




Next time: ORSON WELLES



THE HECTOR LASSITER SERIES, AS PUBLISHED BY BETIMES BOOKS:


ONE TRUE SENTENCE: Paperback/eBook

FOREVER'S JUST PRETEND: Paperback/eBook

TOROS & TORSOS: Paperback/eBook

THE GREAT PRETENDER: Paperback/eBook

ROLL THE CREDITS: Paperback/eBook

THE RUNNING KIND: Paperback/eBook

HEAD GAMES: Paperback/eBook

PRINT THE LEGEND: Paperback/eBook/audio

DEATH IN THE FACE: Paperback/eBook

THREE CHORDS & THE TRUTH: Paperback/eBook