George
Magazine - October 1995
article > Jim
Carroll
source > Harmony
Special K
It seems a grand mistake, almost
aesthetically shameful, to play the game of deciphering moral
intent in Kids, the controversial film by renegade
photographer Larry Clark, which will have finally reached all its
intended theatres by mid - September. The movie seems to exist
without ulterior motive -- partly due to its documentary style,
partly because of the unique vision shared by Clark and his
collaborator, Harmony Korine. "I always wanted to make the
teenage movie that I felt America never had," Clark has said.
"The great American teenage movie, like the 'great American
novel.'"
Kids indeed is masterful.
The irony is that, for political reasons, the movie will probably
have been interpreted by every pundit and hack from New Hampshire
to the Senate floor, Disney fled the project early because of the
probability of an NC - 17 rating -- the executives headed
downstream in a flotilla of birch - bark canoes. Its subsidiary
Miramax, the film's owner, stuck by it through the heat, but still
found some margin of distance by creating a separate company for
its distribution. And if Robert Dole found True Romance
disturbing, he would do well to have medical technicians standing
by for Kids. After all, kids are our future.
Of course, that's the problem.
It's not the sex scenes, or the drugs, or even the single scene of
ultra - violence [though it is one of the most shocking displays
of brutality I've ever witnessed onscreen]; it is the age of the
performers that's got everyone so wigged out. The characters [all
played by nonprofessionals] range in age from about 10 to 16. At
the press conference after the film's debut at Cannes, reporters
blistered the director and writer for exploitation,
objectification [a horrid Sin!] and gross exaggeration.
The film deals with the
subculture of skateboarders who hang around New York City's
Washington Square Park by day and party by night, either at a
disco or the apartment of anyone whose parents happen to be out of
town. They eschew hard drugs, opting for cigar - sized joints and
"forties" of malt liquor. These are real kids without
any traces of Hollywood's nooky standards. They are horny and
vital and have no need for the kink and psychological
paraphernalia of adult intimacy. No need for $500 worth of lace -
shrouded fantasy from Victoria's Secret, no need for acrobatics in
whirlpools shaped like champagne glasses. Which is not to say
there is no quirkiness among the characters' sexual wants. The
entire appetite of Telly, the male lead, is defined by a very
devious fixation.
But how exaggerated are these
kids? Passing the other day through Washington Square Park, where
much of the film takes place, I saw four drug buys go down -- and
I was in a hurry. Teen promiscuity has become a cottage industry
for talk shows such as Ricki Lake, Jenny Jones et al., where 15 -
year - old girls compete to be the one who has humped the most
guys since age 12.
The furor over the age of the
kids in the film, though, provokes a mystifying question that
recurs from one generation to the next. At what point, and by what
experience, do we adults find ourselves so insulated by the
artifice and purblind world - weariness of society that we not
only lose the vision and freedom of youth -- and, admittedly, its
recklessness and misjudgments -- but, further, find ourselves so
fearful of youth and its particular subcultures? What is the
threshold of this change? It seems to seize individuals at various
ages and to widely different extents, but very few do not yield to
it in one form or another. Kafka saw it as a shell, which, in The
Metamorphosis, overcame and transformed Gregor in a single
night. In The Death Of Ivan Ilyich, Tolstoy describes how
youth's radiance is weakened by quotidian repetitions, ossifying
into a husk, repelling tolerance of anything new. The shell is
strong in these times, hardened by the creature comforts of
technology. We drive to work within the still confines of our
cars. We work inside high - rises of black glass, which literally
absorb sunlight. We relax later in front of tubes that slyly suck
the life source from us as they harden the husk.
Nothing penetrates this
encasement like the exotic, erotic energy of youth. It is
otherworldly to those confined, and its threat is massive. This is
the power behind Kids, and the fear it evokes. No other film in
the history of cinema is more honest to the pure energy of youth
culture.
Let's face it: Youth really
hasn't changed that much since the mid - '60s and the so - called
counterculture revolution. That means the majority of the fearful
shell - encased out there had a youth that was not all that
different in its decadence than that portrayed in Kids.
This being the case, from one generation to the next, why is it so
difficult for so many to realize that 95 percent of today's kids [including
the cast of the film] will, sometime over the next decade, recede
deeply within their own shells? Some will be adorned with blue
collars, others white -- but they'll join the citizen masses, cut
off from their own radiance.
One couldn't do better than Larry
Clark as an example of a man without a shell, whose radiance of
vision at 52 years of age has not diminished. Perhaps he has never
truly been socialized: In part because of his obsession as an
artist, in part because of his literally outlaw persona. He served
three years in prison for shooting someone in a rather heated
dispute back in the mid '70s in Tulsa.
But it is the screenwriter Korine,
at 20 still a kid himself, who interests me more. I began hearing
about him two years ago. People on the downtown streets started
approaching me and telling me about this kid -- apparently a fan
of my work -- who was going around the art scene telling folks
that I attended his birth, circa 1974, in some eucalyptus grove in
the Northern Californian town of Bolinas. The fact is, I was
indeed living at that time in BoImas, a heavy - duty hippie
enclave consisting of a mesa, a bar, a laundromat and an agate -
strewn beach on the Pacific. According to this kid's own lore, not
only had I attended this birth al fresco, but upon Korine's
emergence, I had ceremoniously cut the cord between his mother and
himself. I had to really strain my memory on this claim.
Then began pleas, from a mutual
friend of the kid's parents and mine, to read his work. I begged
off; but about a year and a half ago I received a screenplay in
the mail from producer Cary Woods. It was titled Kids, and
beneath that was handwritten "By Harmony Korine, The Famous
Writer." The guy from the nativity scene, I realized. I read
the script in one sitting. It blew me away. To possess such
natural and yet refined talent at 18 [which is when he wrote the
script] was extraordinary, of course. The little weasel was right,
I thought: I had cut his cord. Suddenly the whole scene was quite
vivid in my memory.
We began an acquaintanceship by
phone; then, one night on the set of a film I was involved with,
he came up and introduced himself in person. He didn't look a day
over 14 with his mop haircut. He was short and subdued. His face
bore the sharp features of the diverse lineage he has claimed to
me. His great - grand mother was, apparently, a Shaman of the Zuni
Indian Tribe. His mother was the free - spirited offspring of
Norwegian and Mexican parents, her youth spent in the South among
a fundamentalist Christian sect. His father, born into a secular
Jewish family of 14 siblings, pursued a career in acting in his
early twenties, doing mainly summer stock.
But the strangest part of
Korine's background is his claim, in his official Miramax
biography, that Huntz Hall, one of the stars of the Bowery Boys
movies, is his uncle. Most press persons consider this one of
Korine's typical ruses, but I have reason to give him the benefit
of the doubt . . . . somewhat. In 1981, on a promotional tour of
Europe for a record album, I actually met Hall in a hotel bar and
ended up in conversation. We were discussing a Jorge Luis Borges
story about a young insomniac cursed with the inability to forget
anything, when Hall told me: "I have a young nephew much like
that. He is only five or six years old, and he seemingly can
recite the dialogue to every Bowery Boys film verbatim. He gets on
the phone with me and goes on and on. Last call it was Angels
With Dirty Faces."
"'Rocky dies yellow,'"
I shot back.
"There you go," said
Huntz. "But no kidding, the child is amazing .... or autistic."
Could this mnemonic nephew, whom
Huntz Hall spoke so fondly of that night in Paris, be Harmony
Korine? Why not?
Korine just doesn't buy into the
system; by his words it is obvious. Perhaps this is why he amuses
himself by constantly reinventing his life. He is one of those
select few who will move smoothly from one generation of kids to
the next, knowing that the only difference is fashion.
That's not completely true, of
course. The violence of kids today, both quantitatively and
qualitatively, has enormously increased in ration beyond that of
sex and drugs. [The movie's most brutal scene was inspired by an
all - too - real event Korine witnessed no more than 20 yards from
where it was filmed.] The reasons for the increased violence have
been scrutinized ad nauseam, and I both don't understand them and
understand them too well. For enormous sectors of the youth
population, parental guidance is either nil or manifested by
abuse. For too many kids, nobody's home. And it's going to get
worse before getting better.
A friend who works as a
substitute teacher in schools for "troubled" kids gave
some eight and and nine - year - olds clay to mold. Of the nine
students, eight constructed guns [mainly Tec - 9s]. The remaining
kid was slightly more imaginative: He fashioned his clay into a
beeper.
In the '60s and '?Os, the world
was still slow enough for many kids to recognize their own
misjudgments and recover. But what will become of those kids that
are economically disenfranchised from the high - speed
technological future? They'll either riot and loot in cyberspace
or die of nonexposure in some virtual ditch right off the main
hyper - drag. Their radiance will be perverted, turned in on
itself. As society speeds along at a vertiginous pace, moral
boundaries become so subjective that they are no longer binding.
Throughout Kids, the lead
female character, Jennie [played by Chloë Sevigny], wanders
trancelike on a quest to find Telly, for a purpose that is never
made entirely clear, nor resolved. It is unlikely that she herself
knows. And it's doubtful that we, the audience, know. The kids
themselves sure don't have a clue. It's just too fast out there
these days.
Enclosed in their husks and
behind the many masks of the system and its time, not many adults
will truly allow the freshness of Kids to enter on its own
terms, without their own moral impositions. The best one can do,
after seeing this film, is to sincerely try to answer the question
posed by Casper, one of the most zonked - out characters, in Kids'
final line: "Jesus Christ, what happened?"
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