James Ellroy on his mother and the Dahlia:
It was a salutary ode to Elizabeth Short and a self-serving and perfunctory embrace of my mother. I acknowledged the Jean–Betty confluence in media appearances and exploited it to sell books. My performances were commanding at first glance and glib upon reappraisal. I cut my mother down to sound-bite size and packaged her wholesale. I determined the cause of my ruthlessness years later.
She owned me. Her claim rankled. I wanted to portray myself as a man above all Oedipal constraints. I had created a fictional Elizabeth Short to usurp my mother’s claim and upstage her. It worked in the novel. It sold a great many books. It left Jean Hilliker still dead on that roadside, unblessed with love.
Cherchez la femme.
I'm not sure if I'll see this in the theatre or not. I love Scarlett Johansson so there is some temptation there. Plus the idea of it fits so perfectly with The Mystery of Marie Roget by Poe that I just read for the R.I.P. challenge. We'll see. I'm sure its something I'll check out on DVD if not at the theatre.
ReplyDeleteI was fairly excited that they were turning this into a movie. But I just can't get excited about Josh Hartnett.
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