Saturday, September 13, 2008
Hellhound Postscript: Blues Walkin' Like a Man
And so ends one version of the life of Robert Johnson--my 40-year-old script admired by many over the decades, but criticized by some too for sentimentality. (I'd say in defense that I tried to portray a flawed man rather than a myth.) At any rate, Hellhound is now on-line for anyone to examine and decide for him/herself.
Eventually there were other attempts: Alan Greenberg's too-surreal Love In Vain (which appeared as a book but was never filmed), and the silly Crossroads picture, and the Blaxploitation Leadbelly movie (which I egotistically thought might have "borrowed" some ideas from my widely circulating script), and the more recent Johnson docudramas--they all had ideas worth considering, but none of them attempted to create a whole world and a thoroughly imagined life.
I may not have nailed it, but I did struggle to do justice to one amazing Bluesman's poorly documented, Depression-era history, and be as culturally/socially/linguistically accurate as a white man writing a third of a century later might be.
Was Johnson's life tragic? Or was he merely heroic and skillful, pathetic and foolish in equal measure? The two or three known photos of him are finally as confusing as the recorded memories of other musicians and (supposed) friends concerning his musical prowess and his sad early death.
Only the great 29 songs (in 40-some existing takes) and the mystery remain.
Labels:
Hellhound on My Trail,
Love in Vain,
Robert Johnson
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Hellhound 22: Hello, Satan
NIGHT--INTERIOR ROADHOUSE
The place is filling up, not yet at capacity--black people out from town or in from their sharecrop farms for the Saturday night dance. Betty Mae and Ralph sit in tense silence at a table between the dance floor and the bar. Robert is on the small bandstand beside the crowded dance floor.
JOHNSON: I 'uz thinkin', peoples--gettin' sho' nuff hot an' funky in here. Time to slow on down... time for some blues.
A few voiced objections from the dancers, but most are ready for a drink and a rest; these head for the bar.
JOHNSON: Could use a drink m'self. What say, Ralph?
ANGLE ON TABLE
Curtis registers displeasure, but then waves his agreement. He gets up and heads over to the bar to help Charles with the drinks.
ANGLE ON JOHNSON
He grins gleefully at getting the boss to work for him. Now he heaps insult on injury with the song he proceeds to play.
JOHNSON: All right, brothers an' sisters. I wrote this li'l thing for a' ol' frien'...
The song is his gentle "Honeymoon Blues," with such lyrics as these:
Betty Mae, Betty Mae, you shall be my wife some day (repeat)
I wants a sweet girl that will do anythin' that I say.
Someday I will return with the marriage license in my hand (repeat)
I'm gonna' to take you for a honeymoon in some long, long distant land.
Robert's own glances make it quite clear to whom the song is dedicated.
ANGLE ON THE CROWD
Some stirring and amused whispering. A few people watch Betty Mae. Others look around for Ralph.
CLOSE ON BETTY MAE
She doesn't know how to react--embarrassment, worry about her husband's reaction, pleasure at Johnson's words. She alternately stares down at the table and sneaks glances at the crowd of listeners.
ANGLE ON THE BAR
Ralph is behind it serving some people. He seems to be ignoring the whole thing aside from a general tightening of his facial muscles and a sheen of perspiration. Charles glances at him curiously; Ralph becomes aware of this and stares his barman down. Charles turns away, busying himself with customers.
ANOTHER ANGLE
The music continues throughout. Curtis takes out a new bottle of whiskey and turns his back on his customers (and the camera), presumably opening the bottle, but doing something at the back shelf too. When he moves away, we can see the now-open can of Red Devil lye.
ANGLE DOWN ON CROWD
Ralph approaches the bandstand carrying the loosely corked bottle and a glass. Without looking at Johnson, he hands these to him, then returns to the table where his wife waits. We can't see his face, but something there makes Betty Mae drop her eyes.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
As he pulls the cork and tosses it; he also puts the glass aside.
JOHNSON (patronizing tone): Why, thank ya, Ralph.
He takes a long pull from the bottle, then shudders at the taste.
JOHNSON: Brrr! Ralph, you keep servin' mule-kick like this, you gonn' rez-u-reck Pro'bition!
ANOTHER ANGLE ON THE ROOM
No sign from Ralph that he has heard this quip. Some laughter from the crowd as Johnson takes a small swallow, then sets the bottle at his feet and moves into his next song. Dissolve to:
CLOSE ON THE BOTTLE
Now half-empty. Johnson's feet shift awkwardly beside it.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
He looks decidedly ill now, shifting about uncomfortably. He is sweating heavily.
JOHNSON: Folks, I'm feelin' some sickly. I'm gonn' get off here now...
ANGLE ON CROWDED DANCE FLOOR--JOHNSON'S P.O.V.
Vocal opposition to this from the happy dancers looking up at him.
WOMAN: No, Robert! You cain't quit now!
FIRST MAN: You is in the alley!
SECOND MAN: We come all way out from town!
Betty Mae can be seen still seated in the background; she appears concerned. Curtis is talking to someone else.
ANGLE ON BANDSTAND
Johnson shifts uncomfortably, but he accedes to the crowd's demand.
JOHNSON: All right, I stay... long's I kin...
He looks over at Betty Mae and Curtis, and watching them seems to decide what to play next--his touching and beautiful "Love in Vain":
I followed her to the station, with her suitcase in my hand (repeat)
Well, it's hard to tell, it's hard to tell, when all your love's in vain, all my love's in vain...
When the train lef' the station, she had two lights on behind (repeat)
Well, the blue light was my blues, and the red light was my mind...
CLOSE ON BETTY MAE
Her reaction to this despairing love song.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
Looking sicker and sicker as he struggles to get through this number. But he finally keels over, actually fainting.
ANOTHER ANGLE
He falls off the stool, knocking the bottle over, his guitar crashing down among the dancers. Consternation and concern from them.
ANGLE ON THE TABLE
Betty Mae leaps up, but Curtis grabs her arm and holds her back. Then he slowly gets up himself. He walks toward Johnson holding Betty Mae behind him and shouldering other people aside.
CURTIS: It's all right, folks. Prob'ly jus' too much to drink. I warned him 'bout that... Some o' y'all with a car tote him in to Greenwood. Pete? Thomas?
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson is half-conscious, writhing on the floor. The two large men Curtis designated lift Robert to his feet. Curtis lets go of his wife, gesturing to the other onlookers.
CURTIS: Cool down now! The boy be fine. Bar's still open, an' we get somebody up to play right quick.
The men half-walk, half-carry Johnson forward. He is more alert now, and as Curtis turns away, their eyes meet.
CLOSE ON CURTIS
Sweat streaming down his face; his look is stony and slightly triumphant.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
Pain twisting his features, he yet gives Curtis a searching look, then a slight nod and the ghost of a half-smile.
ANGLE ON THE GROUP--HAND-HELD
Now stomach cramps double Robert over, and the men half-carry him towards the door out. Betty Mae sounds a wordless moan and tries to move past Curtis, but he holds her back again; then both of them slowly follow along after the three men, walking out of the building.
NIGHT--EXTERIOR ROADHOUSE--HAND-HELD
Many people watch from the doorway of Ralph's Roadhouse as Johnson and the men move across the half-lit spaces outside. Curtis halts Betty Mae once more. Suddenly the most excruciating pains yet clutch at Johnson's insides; and like a puppet yanked aside, his reacting muscles tear him from the supporting arms and throw him onto the ground.
JOHNSON (groaning): Maee...
BETTY MAE (screaming back): Robert!
She tears herself free from Curtis and runs across to Johnson.
LOW ANGLE SEEING MOSTLY DARKNESS
In low light, writhing in pain, Johnson is on his hands and knees; his head hangs down and his silhouette against the night seems some mockery of a four-legged animal. Betty Mae drops to her knees and tries to wrap her arms around him.
BETTY MAE: Oh Robert...
But Johnson has passed beyond awareness now. He moves free of her arms, crawling away from her, away from the light from the roadhouse. Betty Mae spins around, looking for Curtis.
ANGLE ON THE ROADHOUSE
Curtis is alone in the foreground, the watching people beyond him; even Curtis looks horrified now. Betty Mae runs to confront him, striking him about the head and chest with her flailing arms. He makes no move to stop her.
BETTY MAE: You did this! You! I wasn't gone with him! I wasn't!
ANGLE ON JOHNSON
Johnson's hands-and-knees shape moves terrifyingly in the darkness, moaning and groaning its guts out. The soundtrack picks up the highest moan and echoes it electronically, building on it, creating a whole cacophony of animal-like howls. Then the film and sound fade to black and silence.
CLOSE ON HEADSTONE--ZOOM OUT
A new wooden marker reads "ROBERT JOHNSON (1911-1938)." Hands drop a bouquet of wildflowers, as the zoom out reveals the donor, Betty Mae. Robert's grave lies in a small country graveyard. (Music plays throughout this Epilog, a reprise of Johnson's "Me and the Devil," the ending portion that says, "... bury my body down by the highway side... so my ol' evil spirit can get a Greyhoun' bus an' ride.")
ANOTHER ANGLE
Betty Mae turns away and walks across the graveyard to the low wooden fence; a suitcase awaits her outside it. She climbs over the rickety barrier and stops beside her suitcase at the edge of the highway. She is silent and dry-eyed.
Sounds of a large moving vehicle on the road; she looks up.
ANGLE ON THE HIGHWAY
A Thirties-era Greyhound bus approaches; the destination sign above the windshield reads "CHICAGO." Betty Mae flags it down, and the bus stops.
ANGLE ON THE BUS--PAN
Betty Mae boards, and the bus accelerates. Camera follows its departure, holding particularly on the greyhound emblem. Soon that symbol escapes, and the bus recedes up the highway, growing smaller and smaller in the Mississippi farmlands distance. Super roll CREDITS... and END.
Labels:
Betty Mae,
Honeymoon Blues,
Love in Vain,
Red Devil Lye,
Roadhouse
Saturday, September 6, 2008
Hellhound 21: All My Love's in Vain
ANGLE ON THE CROSSROADS
Now signs of the town of Greenwood are visible in the distance. Johnson sits in the shade of a tree, picking out a tune on his guitar and keeping a watchful eye on the roadhouse. When Betty Mae appears and walks hesitantly toward him, he stands up.
BETTY MAE: I cain't see you, Robert. It's not right. (mournfully) Why are you here?
JOHNSON: Baby, I had to see you--I got things to say. You gone back to town, ain'cha? I walk you there.
He picks up his suitcase and starts in the direction of Greenwood. Betty Mae stands still for a moment, torn two ways, then when Robert stops and motions to her, she reluctantly moves forward, still keeping her distance from him.
ANGLE ON THE ROADHOUSE--ZOOM IN
The camera move discovers Ralph's face, inside his roadhouse, watching their departure. Tight on his face then, we see he imagines the worst: Betty Mae's old love has returned to steal her away. He shows a mixture of anguish and anger.
ANGLE ON THE TWO--MOVING
Robert and Betty Mae walk along the highway heading to Greenville. They walk in silence at first. When they do talk, they avoid each other's eyes--when one turns, the other looks away.
JOHNSON: I need you. I ain' know till now jes' how much. (after a pause) I got to ramble, it's in me. I alluz thinkin' I could run alone or wid some buddy, an' fin' woman love whensoever I want, wherever... But that kin' ain' nothin'--no better'n wind in the trees an' dust in the road. You lonelier'n if you was alone.
Betty Mae is watching him now, but Robert stares resolutely off into the distance.
JOHNSON: Bad luck doggin' me ever'where I go... I know I have done evil--I kill one man, an' I hurt some peoples, you mos' of all I 'spect.
Now Betty Mae looks away, resisting her impulse to comfort him.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
His face as he continues.
JOHNSON: I was angry, an' I give you up that way, when what I shoulda done, I shoulda hol' on tighter. Ain' been no whole man no day since--juicin' an' foolin' aroun'. (bitter laugh) I been near drownin' in that stuff.
ANGLE ON THE TWO
Now he stops and faces her, pleading.
JOHNSON: But i ain't in that fast life now. No more, Mae. I come for you now--you what I been try'na fin' all these years.
Betty Mae has her hands over her ears.
BETTY MAE (wailing): Stop it, damn you, Robert! Stop...
She backs away from him before continuing.
BETTY MAE: I love you, Robert. I do. But it's too many years. I'm married now. You cain't jes' come here...
ANOTHER ANGLE--MOVING
Robert is thoughtful as he resumes walking; Betty Mae falls in step beside him.
JOHNSON: I ain' come here t' take you off, Mae. Onlies' thing that's set, I be playin' at Ralph's t'night. Well, tha's my life, ain' it?
BETTY MAE: Ralph loves me strong, Robert. He's a decent man, a hard-workin' man. But he won't accept anythin' between you an' me. He's proud, an' he hol's onto what's his. I won't leave him. 'Specially now...
JOHNSON: I ain't aimin' to do no one else wrong. I ain' so greedy, Mae, no more. I been playin' these blues long enough--I reckon I kin live 'em a mite longer.
Now Betty Mae grabs his arm, stops, and turns him toward her.
CLOSE ON BETTY MAE
She is almost in tears.
BETTY MAE: It's forever, baby. I been tryin' to tell you--I got Ralph's child in me now.
ANGLE ON THE TWO--FAVORING JOHNSON
His reaction: stunned amazement, followed by disappointment, and then somehow a visible acceptance. He nods, chuckles, and slowly walks on.
JOHNSON: Well, well... he's a lucky man. (quietly, almost an incantation) God bless the chile.
Now he takes Betty Mae's hand in his; she allows it now.
JOHNSON (smiling cheerfully): That's all right, mama. Nothin' bad between us. (singing a bit ridiculously) Got a house full o' chil'ren, ain' ne'er one mine...
He winks at Betty Mae, and she laughs in pleased relief. Then, hand in hand, more like old friends than ex-lovers, the two of them amble on down the highway towards Greenwood.
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Hellhound 20: Someday I Will Return
DAY--EXTERIOR COUNTRY CROSSROADS
This crossing of roads (outside Greenwood, Mississippi) looks very much like the one from Johnson's earlier nightmare, though he does not appear to notice. An ancient rattletrap Ford truck wheezes to a halt, and Robert dismounts from the passenger seat, nodding his thanks to the black driver.
JOHNSON: Thank ya.
CLOSER ON THE TRUCK
As Johnson reaches into the truck for his guitar and suitcase, the driver leans over.
DRIVER: Curtis place up the way there. (winks) Good times tonight an' ev'ry Sat'dy night!
Then he waves and sputters off in the Ford. Johnson turns to survey the surrounding countryside.
WIDE ANGLE--P.O.V.--PAN
Robert's view of his surroundings: two distant farmhouses, early-spring green fields of cotton, some other plantings as well. And up the road, two hundred yards or so, set well back with its own long dirt-road entry, a large wooden structure almost like an overgrown shed--Ralph Curtis's dancehall/tavern, with proud sign "RALPH'S ROADHOUSE."
ANOTHER ANGLE
He sets out walking towards the building.
INTERIOR ROADHOUSE
Inside, it is somewhat less impressive, though rather large--a battered bar and tables in one half and a large dance floor beyond. Ralph himself is sweeping the fance area, while his assistant Charles stands behind the bar, cleaning sink and drain; a can of "RED DEVIL" lye waits on the bartop near him.
Johnson enters from outside and saunters over to Charles.
JOHNSON: Ralph Curtis?
CHARLES (waving toward the back): 'At's him yonder.
Robert deposits his suitcase by the bar and, guitar in hand, heads for Curtis.
ANGLE FAVORING CURTIS
Ralph--Betty Mae's husband--is stocky and stolid, a perennially suspicious, easily perspiring member of the incipient Negro middle class. He looks at Johnson impassively as the bluesman near him.
CURTIS: Yeah? What?
JOHNSON (showing guitar): I play--breakdowns, blues, you name it. Need a job.
CURTIS: This ain' no dime juke or two-bit crib. If you can cut it, could be we use ya.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson runs through a few dazzling runs on guitar and plays the opening to "Preachin' Blues" (heard early in the film). Curtis holds up his hand.
CURTIS: So you got that part down. The rest of it is, we open Satiddy only, you stay sober and play onta dawn on a right night. Two dollars, more if you draw folks good. Well?
JOHNSON: Better'n choppin'.
CURTIS (dismissively): Right. Be here come nine... what's you' name anyway?
Robert is already walking away. He turns back with a half-smile.
JOHNSON: Johnson. Calls me "Blues Boy Bob."
ANGLE ON THE BAR
Johnson picks up his suitcase as he walks by.
JOHNSON (to Charles): So long.
Then he heads on out the door. Curtis has trailed him over to the bar.
CHARLES: Who 'zat? Look some familiar.
CURTIS: Say his name Bob Johnson.
CHARLES (thinking while he cleans mugs): Bob Johnson... Johnson... Well, sho'... 'At's Robert Johnson, from up Rob'sonville way. You heard 'is records, ain'cha? Real woman-poison too, folks say.
Curtis is already frowning and staring after Johnson.
ANGLE OUT THE SCREEN DOOR
Which shows Robert making his way down the road, Betty Mae coming towards him. She doesn't recognize him at first, but then stops in astonishment. The two ex-lovers approach each other slowly. Their initial words are not heard, as Charles continues speaking voiceover:
CHARLES' VOICE: Oh, yes, he pick 'em up an' drop 'em down. Say, Ralph, ain't you' wife come from up there?
ANOTHER ANGLE
As Curtis strides over to the screen door and yanks it open.
CURTIS (back to Charles): Shut you' mouf.
EXTERIOR ROADHOUSE
As Curtis emerges and bellows out...
CURTIS: Betty Mae!
ANGLE ON THE TWO
Now the couple is in the foreground and Curtis distant in background, gesturing from the door.
JOHNSON: ... to fin' you, Mae.
Betty Mae waves reassuringly at her husband.
BETTY MAE: I never tol' him, but...
JOHNSON: I be wait out at the crossroads. We got t' talk.
Betty Mae hurries off towards Curtis, but she looks back at Johnson, very much troubled by this encounter. He turns and saunters off.
ANOTHER ANGLE
As Betty Mae approaches her fuming husband.
CURTIS: What 'uz he sayin' at you?
BETTY MAE (not meeting his eyes as she passes): Nothing. He wanted a place in town to stay at. Why, who is he anyway?
She hurries on into the roadhouse. Curtis looks stricken by this casual lie, then somehow both angry and despairing, watching Johnson recede into the distance.
Labels:
Betty Mae,
Greenwood,
Preachin' Blues,
Red Devil Lye,
Roadhouse
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Hellhound 19: See That Lonesome Road
DAWN--EXTERIOR LOGGING CAMP--MOVING
This is an East Texas "piney woods" logging camp with sawmill, board shacks, and an off-shift barrelhouse tavern right on site too; its flimsy sign has a handwritten "MUD'S." Both sawmill and barrelhouse are going full-tilt as Johnson wanders into camp, carrying his suitcase and the replacement guitar strapped across his back. He passes the working area with scarcely a sideways glance, arrives at Mud's just in time to stop, allowing two men, the one helping his drunk cohort, to stumble out from inside.
DRUNK (to Johnson): Good evenin', brother!
Robert looks up at the dawn sky, then grins and answers:
JOHNSON: Evenin' to you.
He walks on inside.
INTERIOR BARRELHOUSE
One long room filled with off-shift workers--a narrow bar, a few tables, a smoke-filled atmosphere, and a battered upright piano stuck off in one corner. An old juke joint/barrelhouse pianist named Henry sits noodling riffs and runs just about as tired as the workers all around the room. Robert skirts the bar and goes over to the piano.
ANGLE ON PIANO
Johnson sets his suitcase and guitar down, which attracts Henry's attention; he turns his head to the sound, revealing dark glasses and blind eyes. And he begins playing a more complete tune, some slow blues number.
HENRY: Who that?
JOHNSON (leaning on the piano): A weary man.
HENRY (playing throughout their talk): New man too, I'd say. The voice...
JOHNSON: Uh-huh. (about the music) Tha's nice 'n' peaceful.
HENRY: Slow drag for the end o' things. You play?
JOHNSON (looking over at the guitar): Gittar. Some harp when I 'uz a kid.
HENRY: That so? What'd you' name be?
JOHNSON: Robert Johnson.
Henry stops playing long enough to hold out his right hand.
HENRY: Henry Perkins. Calls me "Blin' Boy."
They shake hands and then he resumes the music.
HENRY: Seem like I hear talk of Robert Johnson. You him?
JOHNSON (shrugs): Depen's what you hear.
HENRY (smiles): Bad blues gittar, folks say.
JOHNSON: I get on.
Henry lifts one hand to reach for his beer mug atop the piano, finds it empty.
HENRY: Mebbe we try some piano-an'-gittar after 'while.
JOHNSON: Don' min'.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Henry turns to call across to the bartender.
HENRY: Hey, Mud. Two short'uns.
Robert walks over to pick up the two mugs. The room has gradually begun emptying out as the next camp shift makes ready to start. He returns with the beers, pulls up a chair, and sits down next to Henry. He sips from his mug, but Henry takes a deep draught, then sets his aside and resumes playing.
HENRY: Well, Robert Johnson, where be you boun'?
CLOSE ON THE TWO--FAVORING JOHNSON
Robert shrugs silently, then realizes Henry can't see that motion.
JOHNSON: Wherever. Somewheres better than I been, hope to God.
HENRY (slaps his knee): Ain' that th' trufe! But you ain' soun' near old 'nuff to talk it.
JOHNSON (bitterly): How ol' you got t' be to be dead?
Henry absorbs this silently, segueing into another blues number; the talk ceases for a moment.
HENRY: Some better up North, folks say. Seem like they's movin' up there, anyway--Indiana, Chicago, an' such like.
Johnson absorbs this in silence, shaking his head gloomily.
HENRY: Yessir, that's black man's future, folks say. Mebbe I oughta roll on up that river myself.
JOHNSON (intensely): Blin' Boy, it ain't. I been there.
CLOSE ON HENRY
As he turns and answers Robert just as intently.
HENRY: Son, I be fo'ty-nine year old, near's I kin tell. Live my whole life in Arkansaw, Loo-zana, Eas' Texas--these ol' piney camps. It's damn got t' be better!
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson shakes his head but says nothing. He finishes his beer, and Henry resumes playing. Then:
JOHNSON: No better, jes' diff'runt.
Henry plays silently, lost in the music for a moment.
HENRY: Yeah, I 'speck you right. Hell, if'n I found it, I ain' know whut t' do wid it anyways.
Another silence as they both mull things over. Then the 6 a.m. steam whistle sounds loudly from outside; Robert is startled a bit, but Henry pays no attention.
HENRY: You hear 'bout Bessie?
JOHNSON: Hear what?
HENRY: She done pass on, coupla weeks back. Auto-mobile crash, over t' Mis'sip' or Alabam. Bled on out, folk say, try'na get inta the white man hospital.
JOHNSON (clearly shaken): God-dam, Blin' Boy. Bessie Smith cain't be gone like that.
HENRY: Well, she is. "Queen o' the Blues"? Don' make no nevermin's, it's the road we all gone down, fast or slow. (sings a line from a Smith record) "See that lonesome road, Lawd, it got to end..."
ANGLE ON THE ROOM
Now the midnight-shift workers begin streaming in, their first noisy stop the bar. Then they spread out heading for tables or the small open space meant for dancing.
CLOSE ON THE TWO
Robert and Henry have to talk loudly now to hear each other.
HENRY: Know what the answer is, Robert? Get'cha a good woman. Not no bottle--Lord knows, not these blues lines. Jes' a sof' sweet gal ta hol' onta.
JOHNSON (doubtful): I don' know...
HENRY: I'm tellin' ya, ain't I? You ever have a gal like that?
ANOTHER ANGLE
Several of the new arrivals are ready to whoop it up now.
FIRST MAN: C'mon, Blin' Boy, put me in the dozens!
SECOND MAN: Kick 'em on down!
A third man is in the dance space, all set to step out.
THIRD MAN: I got to be movin', son--where you' Ma Grinder at?
Henry waves one hand in response.
HENRY: Comin' at ya.
Then he bangs into a high-spirited, gutbucket piano stomp.
CLOSE ON HENRY
Robert leans into make himself heard.
JOHNSON: One like that a long time ago, but she took up wid somebody else.
HENRY: Well, you young, ain'cha? Git 'er on back.
Now Henry really gets into the number, swaying and rocking on his piano stool.
ANOTHER ANGLE
The workers are whooping and hollering too, some of them leaping and dancing, beer mugs right in their hands. Johnson looks lost in thought.
HENRY (shouting): Yessir, that's the ticket! One good gal!
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
He finally accepts the notion, makes up his mind, nods his head, and speaks aloud but to himself.
JOHNSON: All right, I will then...
Labels:
Barrelhouse,
East Texas,
Logging Camp,
Piney Woods
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Hellhound 18: Me an' the Devil
((The fifth section begins here--the last act in this extended look at the harsh life of a Thirties bluesman. We begin, still in Dallas...))
DAY--INTERIOR OFFICE
This is the unused office which the record company ARC has converted for its schedule of "field" recording in Dallas. Two white women are seated on a moth-eaten couch talking listlessly. The sound of string band music comes from within the closed recording portion. Johnson enters, dressed in clean clothes. He is cold sober and now, unexpectedly on the morning after the previous scene, a stronger, more confident man, even quietly dignified. The women look at him with some distaste or dismissal, but he ignores them, standing quietly off to one side.
ANOTHER ANGLE
The closed recording room door opens, and Dawson escorts out the four-man string band in their Western clothing. The women rise to stand with their men.
DAWSON: Thanks, boys. A fine session. I think we'll all do well...
The players insist on each man shaking Dawson's hand as a goodbye. Then all exit, passing now on both sides of Johnson and giving him the onceover. Dawson nods at him coolly.
DAWSON: Well, Johnson, you ready now to work? I got you a replacement guitar.
The bluesman walks over to him, subdued and somehow a different man.
JOHNSON: Yes. I am.
Dawson looks at him in surprise. The change really is apparent. Guitar music begins on the track...
INTERIOR--RECORDING AREA
The set-up is different this time. Johnson at the mic is separated from Harry the engineer and Dawson by a glass office partition. They work the equipment and watch as he finishes his outspoken sexual blues called "Traveling Riverside":
Now you can squeeze my lemon till the juice run down my leg
Till the juice run down my leg, baby... (spoken) You know what I'm talkin' about...
(and so on, to the end)
The song finishes, and Johnson relaxes in his chair, not bothering to turn and look at the white men.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Dawson speaks via the rigged-up intercom.
DAWSON: Whew! I said sexy, Robert--not pornographic. What do you call that, anyway?
HARRY (muttering again, but audible): Most disgusting thing I ever heard. Animals, that's what they are...
ANGLE ON ROBERT
Now he turns to stare at the engineer through the glass. His answer is cold and proud.
JOHNSON: Call it "Mammyjammer Blues." In honor to you' frien' there.
ANGLE ON ENGINEER AND PRODUCER
Harry half-rises, not quite sure whether to be angry or "honored."
HARRY: What's that supposed to mean?
DAWSON: Shut up, Harry. You brought it on yourself.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
As he points at Harry.
JOHNSON: If you is got any mo' discs, Miste' Engineer, I got two mo' songs...
ANOTHER ANGLE
Dawson signals his okay, proceed.
DAWSON: We're fine. Go ahead when you're ready.
Robert turns back to the mic, adjusts the bottleneck on his finger, and mutters to himself.
JOHNSON: Try this one on, white folks...
Then he plays/sings the haunted and paranoid (or guilty) blues--the film's title song--"Hellhound on My Trail," the awkward beginnings of which we saw early in the film.
I got to keep movin', got to keep movin', blues fallin' down like hail, blues fallin' down like hail,
Umm, blues fallin' down like hail, blues fallin' down like hail,
An' the day keeps on 'mindin' me there's a hellhound on my trail, hellhound on my trail, hellhound on my trail...
Etc. The song plays through completely, the camera watching Johnson from a variety of angles, but always medium shots; intercut with these are the folllowing inserts:
INSERT--HARRY
The engineer is listening intently, but mechanically, doing his sound job, frowning.
INSERT--DAWSON
The producer is surprised by the intensity of this song and performance.
INSERT--HARRY
He turns to fiddle with various knobs, adjusting the recording levels.
INSERT--DAWSON
He has risen to his feet, unconsciously holding his breath, at pains to keep silent and not disturb the moment.
ANGLE ON JOHNSON
As he finishes in a final burst of of guitar notes. Dawson is visible, standing beyond the partition. Johnson turns to signal something as Dawson speaks.
DAWSON: Good God, man! Where did...
JOHNSON (interrupting): Keep rollin' it--I got 'nother one...
He turns back to the mic and launches immediately into his most chilling and evil blues of all, "Me and the Devil," all anger and despair:
Early this mornin' when you knocked upon my door (repeat)
I said, "Hello, Satan, I b'lieve it's time to go."
Me an' the devil was walkin' side by side (repeat)
I'm goin' to beat my woman till I get satisfied...
You may bury my body down by the highway side
(spoken interjection:) Babe, I don' care where you bury my body when I'm dead an' gone
So my ol' evil spirit can get a Greyhoun' bus and ride.
This time the camera concentrates on Johnson only--moving fluidly all around him, in tight on his face, tight on his hands on the guitar, angled down on his body and the mic (from above), etc. The bluesman's face shows all the intensity and searing pain of the song (and of his soul). Dawson can be seen in the background once or twice, pressed against the glass, intent and staring. By the last verse, tears are streaming down from Johnson's eyes as he looks deep into the abyss of his erratic life. He ends, slumped over, head bowed over the mic.
ANGLE ON JOHNSON AND CONTROL ROOM
All are momentarily frozen, unwilling to break the silence. Then the engineer's voice sounds over the intercom.
HARRY: Goddam cylinders... useless as this nigger music...
Dawson turns to glare at Harry silently. Robert brushes the tears from his cheeks, then rises.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson turns to face the control booth.
JOHNSON: Gimme my money, boss--time to shake the Dallas dust off'n my shoes...
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Hellhound 17: In the Midnight Hour
DAY--INTERIOR JAIL CELL
As Johnson's limp body tumbles to the floor in a heap. His face is puffed and bruised; he moves like his body is too. From the doorway the fat cop tosses Johnson's broken, strings-dangling guitar in after him.
FAT COP: Play yourself some blues--that's what you call 'em, ain't it, black boy? Oh yeah, I dipped my wick in that ink a time or two. Haw, haw, haw!
ANOTHER ANGLE
Wincing with pain, Johnson struggles up onto the bunk, clutching his busted guitar. He looks at it, then hurls it away in disgust--causing himself further pain. He groans loudly, then lies there staring at the darkness.
TWILIGHT--ANGLE ON CELL BARS AND DOOR
The fat cop pulls the door open; he is angry.
FAT COP: On your feet, black boy. You lucked out.
Dawson appears behind him.
DAWSON: Robert? You all right?
ANOTHER ANGLE
As Johnson rises from the bunk, still wincing, but putting on a strut.
JOHNSON: Doin' some better now, Miste' Dawson.
He saunters past the fat cop and thrusts the broken guitar into his hands.
JOHNSON: Here go, boss--play you'-self some blues.
TWILIGHT--EXTERIOR POLICE STATION
Dawson and Johnson emerge and descend the steps to climb into the auto Dawson and Harry are using. Harry has the motor idling; Dawson helps the slow-moving bluesman into the back seat, and he climbs in the front passenger spot. The car speeds off.
INTERIOR AUTO
Dawson twists around to talk with Johnson while Harry drives.
DAWSON: Good Lord, man, what happened to you?
Johnson shrugs, then flinches from the pain.
JOHNSON: Pool hall fight. An' then I done what the po-lice call re-sistin' arrest.
DAWSON: You mean the cops did that to you? But it was a policeman that called me...
JOHNSON: Jes' one of 'em work on me... (exhibiting torn sleeve and tooth marks) him an' his dog. Smash my gittar too.
HARRY (under his breath): Thank God for small favors...
DAWSON: Shut up, Harry. (to Johnson) No problem, we'll find you something--and deduct it from your wages, of course. (shakes his head) Incredible... How could such brutality be allowed to go on?
Robert laughs aloud at that naive remark.
JOHNSON: You sho' ain't black.
EXTERIOR STREET--BLACK SECTION
The car stops and Johnson climbs painfully out. Dawson leans out his window to say a few more words.
DAWSON: Stay put this time, Robert, okay? You got everything you need now? Money enough?
JOHNSON: Axe the Dallas po-lice. They got mine.
Dawson digs deep and comes up with a handful of change.
DAWSON: Here's forty-five cents for a meal. Don't blow it on booze, please?
JOHNSON (with a tired grin): Don' need ta--whiskey'n my room already.
Then he painfully mounts the stairs to his clapboard hotel.
NIGHT--HOTEL HALLWAY
Johnson is talking into the wall telephone. His bruised face has been tended to and he is smiling at something camera does not see. He also looks drunk again.
JOHNSON: Miste' Dawson?
INTERIOR HOTEL ROOM
Dawson has just picked up his room phone; he is in his underwear, hair touseled, looking half-asleep.
DAWSON: Robert? What the hell's the matter now? (looks at his watch) What do you mean, you're lonesome?
HOTEL HALLWAY--ANOTHER ANGLE
Now we see the object of Johnson's attention--a smiling sexy woman who hands him a glass of whiskey and runs her fingernails down his cheek.
JOHNSON (slurring): I'm lonesome an' they's a gal here. She wants fi'ty cents an' I lacks a nickel...
Clearly over the telephone connection comes the sound of an outraged shout and a receiver slammed down (Dawson reacting at his end). Johnson flinches at the ear shock, then shrugs and hangs up.
JOHNSON: Well, mama, look like you gonn' has t' choose 'tween me an' a fi'-cent-piece.
She looks him over, then answers with her own shrug. She takes his arm, and the two of them head for his room, Johnson weaving a bit.
NIGHT--INTERIOR HOTEL ROOM
Shabby furnishings as ever; bare lightbulb illumination from overhead. Johnson sits at a small table, pouring himself another drink; he is bare-chested. The woman frets on the bed in her bra and panties.
WOMAN: Come on, daddy. Leave off that bottle.
Johnson mumbles something stupidly, lifting the glass to peer up through it at the lightbulb.
WOMAN (wheedling): I be good to ya, honest...
She rubs her pubic area but Johnson is paying no attention.
WOMAN (angry now): Shit, you ain't want a woman--all's you need 's a whiskey-tit.
With that, she bounces up off the bed and over to the table. She grabs up the bottle, and when Johnson stupidly turns to look for it, she yanks her bra down and pours a few drops on each nipple, rubbing the alcohol into her flesh. Then she smiles seductively and falls back on the bed, holding the bottle on her belly.
WOMAN: Here ya go, bottle baby...
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson lumbers drunkenly to his feet and over to the bed, where he tries to grab the bottle back. But she resists him, and finally he simply hits out at her with his arm and hand, harder than he realizes, knocking her off the bed. Her head strikes a corner of the bedstand, and she goes limp. Johnson looks around for her stupidly, then sees her on the floor. He tumbles off beside her.
JOHNSON (dazed): Mae, honey, i ain' mean t' knock you down...
INSERT--BETTY MAE
As seen early in the film when Johnson inadvertently knocked her to the floor.
AS BEFORE
Johnson awkwardly lifts the woman's head, and his hand comes away with a small smear of blood. He stares at this stupidly for a moment, then reacts with a terrible groan, scuttling backward, letting her head fall to the floor again.
INSERT--LOUISE
As seen in the death scene, Louise bloody and dead in the hotel room.
AS BEFORE
Johnson lunges away from the woman, gagging and retching, and half-crawls, half-runs to the room door, yanking it open and stumbling out into the hall.
HALLWAY--HAND-HELD
Johnson staggers away from the room and near the wall telephone falls to his knees once more, vomiting up all the cheap whiskey and bad memories.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
The back of his lowered head as he continues to gag and gasp and choke. Finally, the heaving subsides, and he crawls off to another spot where he hunches against the wall, staring blankly.
ANOTHER ANGLE--HAND-HELD AGAIN
After a moment, sounds from the hotel room bring him back to awareness. In agony but also relieved, he gets up and staggers back to the doorway. Framed across the room he sees the woman pulling on her dress and dabbing at her head with a handkerchief.
INTERIOR--HOTEL ROOM
At the sight of Johnson, she lets out a shriek of anger and charges at him. But she stops short, merely holding up her purse threateningly.
WOMAN: Where's my money, motherfucker?
JOHNSON: I... I'm sorry...
He reaches out to her, but she knocks his hands away.
WOMAN: Keep you' monkey paws offa me! Jus' gimme my fifty cents 'fore I calls my mack down on you!
Johnson reaches into his pants pocket and hands her the coins.
JOHNSON: Fo'ty-five cents is all...
She snatches it from him, counts it, then glares at him in anger, wounded dignity, and residual pain. Then she flings the coins in his face.
WOMAN: Keep it, you damn jackass-balls no-good! Your money ain't good enuff!
Then she slams him out of the way with her purse and strides from the room.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
He rubs his face where the coins stung, staring after her. Then he wearily turns away.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson stumbles over to the table and collapses into the chair. He looks all the way down--drained, exhausted, sober finally, lost in depression and his memories of other days...
INSERT--BETTY MAE
From the scene of Robert's triumphant return to Son and Willie.
INSERT--JOHNNY
His typical charming self, executing a bow.
INSERT--LOUISE
As she was when first seen, sultry and sexy and fiery.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
Tears well up in his eyes and begin to trail down his cheeks. He rubs his neck where the lucky bag once was, then slowly lowers his head onto his arms crossed on the table top. He doesn't move again.
((END OF SECTION 4--of my failings in this script, Johnson's "dark night of the soul" is probably the most overwritten and romantically cliched; chalk it up to a fledgling screenwriter in his 20's trying to write stuff that might somehow seem tragic and mythic. At any rate, Section 5 rises above all this pathos. Stay tuned...))
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Hellhound 16: Deep Ellum Blues
DAY--INTERIOR DALLAS TRAIN STATION
Waiting beside a newly arrived train are Dawson, nervously pacing, and Harry, as ornery as ever. The train is emptying, people disembarking, milling around, but no sign of Johnson. Finally, from a far-back car comes Robert--he is dressed in better clothes now but these are wrinkled and dirty too. He is also already drunk, staggering badly; the wound near his eye has healed, leaving a small scar. (In the scenes that follow, Johnson is sullen and careless--not arrogant exactly, just not caring what happens, and careless of black-white relationship rules.) Dawson hurries to meet him.
DAWSON: Robert! Good to see you.
He hold out his hand to shake with Johnson.
ANGLE ON THE TWO
Johnson interprets this as an offer of assistance--so he hands his flimsy suitcase to Dawson instead. (His guitar is slung over his back.)
JOHNSON: Yeah.
Dawson is surprised, but he quickly passes the suitcase over to surly and reluctant Harry, who handles it as though it might bite.
DAWSON: Welcome to Dallas. How was the trip?
Johnson looks at him stupidly for a beat, then mumbles...
JOHNSON: Fine, fine... better'n ridin' the blin's, I 'spect. (pause) What now, white folks?
ANOTHER ANGLE--MOVING
Dawson is anxious to get moving, so he sort of half-steers Johnson into walking. Harry is left to carry the suitcase; his disgust is evident.
DAWSON: First thing we do is get you settled in a hotel. We'll be recording in an office I'll show you--starting tomorrow. (then alluding delicately to Johnson's inebriation) If you're ready...
Johnson says nothing, so Dawson babbles on.
DAWSON: We've got to get a dozen or so new numbers--strong stuff. "32-20" didn't hit like "Terraplane," you know. Got to sew up that race market...
They continue through the station, Harry dragging along behind, Dawson guiding Johnson. The white people ignore them, but a couple of black porters turn to watch this odd procession.
JOHNSON: I got the stuff. (sly glance at Dawson) All's I needs now 's a drink.
They pass on out of the station during Dawson's response.
DAWSON: We'll see. But you've got to pull yourself...
The rest is lost to the exterior city noise.
INTERIOR POOL HALL
In Dallas's black section, a dingy hall with three tables and a bar. A game is in progress between two men; a young woman, the barman, and another man are watching boredly. Johnson reels in, bottle in hand and guitar on his shoulder. He looks the scene over then makes a zig-zag beeline for the sexy girl.
JOHNSON: Hey there, honey, who's got the game?
WOMAN (coldly): My man Jack.
JOHNSON (moving in): Is that right. Well, peaches, while Jackson's busy, what say you an' me go somewheres an' shake yo' tree.
ANOTHER ANGLE
The woman moves away from him without speaking. Johnson then repositions himself between her and the game.
JOHNSON: Now don' be unfrien'ly, baby--where's 'at Texas hospitality you...
He doesn't finish the sentence because something is jabbing him in the back--Jack has arrived, with the tip of his pool cue grinding into Johnson's kidney area.
ANGLE ON THE TWO
Johnson turns to face Jack.
JACK: Lemme cue you in, Eightball--you want a game? You got it. Want trouble, fine, you kin have that too. But Marla... uh-uh.
To emphasize the message, he jams Johnson's stomach with the cue. The bluesman stands quiet as Marla moves around him to stand beside Jack. But when they turn away with a sneer, Johnson slams the bottle down on Jack's head.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Jack drops like a shot, Marla screams and crouches down to help him, and the second player and the no-longer-bored onlooker both charge Johnson, who grins nastily and tosses his guitar aside. The player swings his cue, and Robert dodges him, overturning a small table into the path of his opponents.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
As he grabs up several billiard balls and starts hurling these at the opposition.
CLOSE ON OPPONENTS
They dodge two balls, but a third smacks the cue wielder in the gut, doubling him over.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Jack is out cold, and Marla runs screaming out the bar's front door, calling for help. The barman has moved out from behind the bar as well, carrying a sawed-off cue; he and the third man stalk Johnson, who retreats warily, waving his last ball. Then he slings it at the third man, who dodges it just as Johnson himself hurtles through the air and knocks him to the floor.
CLOSE ON THE BRAWL
As the barman and now-recovered second player close in to join the fray. They pummel Johnson with fists and feet until the barman finally slugs him with the sawed-off cue; and Robert passes out...
ANGLE UP--CLOSE ON SNARLING DOBERMAN--P.O.V.
This is what Robert sees first as he comes to--a snarling dog right in his face.
ANOTHER ANGLE
The Doberman is on a leash held by a fat white policeman. The cop steps back and yanks his dog to heel. Robert shows fear of the dog.
FAT COP: Get up, boy.
Johnson shakes his head to clear it, then clambers to his feet. The barman and a younger cop (Schmidt) approach; everyone else has vanished.
BARMAN (gesturing and pointing): Yes-suh, Miste' Schmidt, crazy nigger come in here, blin' drunk an' spoilin' for a fight, start wreckin' over my place, had to col'-cock him to keep...
Johnson has been rubbing the back of his head, eyeing the dog warily.
JOHNSON (interrupting): Where Jack an' that bitch at, then?
Barman (all innocent): Jack who? (to Schmidt) What I tol' ya, that fool still half outen his mind. Nobody 'cep'im him here since two 'clock.
Johnson starts to move toward the barman, but the fat cop and dog quickly block him.
FAT COP: Stand you' ground, boy. (to Schmidt) C'mon, Smitty--this one's enuff. Nigra in the hand's worth two in the woodpile. Haw, haw, haw!
ANOTHER ANGLE
He grabs Johnson's arm and starts hustling him toward the door. Robert tries to pull loose.
JOHNSON: Hol' up, boss. Need my git-tar.
The fat cop shoves him hard, but Schmidt intercedes.
SCHMIDT: Forget it, Joe. I'll get the guitar.
He picks it up and actually starts strumming it awkwardly while the fat cop impels Johnson ahead of him and out the door.
EXTERIOR POOL HALL
The street is deserted--black people evidently anxious to avoid the Dallas police. The fat cop shoves Johnson toward the waiting paddy wagon.
JOHNSON: Quit pushin'. I'm goin', aint I?
FAT COP: Naw, boy, you ain't goin'--you smart-assin' me, and I don't cotton to it. You ain't from aroun' here, are ya.
JOHNSON (now Tomming blatantly): Lawd, no-suh, Miste' Charlie, suh. I'se jes' a po' country boy in this big ol' frien'ly city. Doin' some re-cordin, suh, tha's all.
The fat cop is busy snapping handcuffs on Robert, but Schmidt perks up, stopping his half-assed attempt at picking out a tune.
SCHMIDT: That right? You make records? What's your name?
ANGLE ON PADDY WAGON
The fat cop throws Johnson into the van as he tries to answer.
JOHNSON (loudly): Robert Johnson. I'm here with the 'Merican Record Corporation! An' they'll be lookin' for me!
Fat cop Joe grabs the guitar and tosses it in on Johnson.
FAT COP: Too bad they ain't gonna find you, boy. You drive, Smitty. (then over Schmidt's half-protest) Nope, Johnson here's a dangerous prisoner, so me an' Smoke's gonna ride inside and keep an eye on 'im.
Johnson is struggling to stand up inside the wagon as the fat cop un-leashes his Doberman, which leaps inside with a growl. Joe winks at Schmidt and climbs inside, pulling the door shut.
INTERIOR PADDY WAGON
Johnson and his guitar are huddled in the forward area, the dog crouched in front of him growling. Joe moves toward them as the van starts moving as well.
CLOSE ON FAT COP--P.O.V.
He closes in on Robert, cracking his knuckles.
FAT COP: So, you big-mouth, black-ass, uppity-nigra record star, too bad you resisted arrest.
Friday, August 15, 2008
Hellhound 15: B'lieve I'm Sinkin' Down
((The fourth section of Hellhound begins just below; there are five in all, so look for the entire finished script, 20-some parts total, to be posted in a few more weeks.))
DAY--EXTERIOR STREET
A busy street in some town, cars and many white people hurrying past Johnson, who stands playing his guitar somewhat desultorily. No one stops to listen, though one or two passersby toss nickels or dimes at this beggar's feet. And "beggar" is what he looks like--fresh scab near his eye, dirt and dried blood on his shirt, scruffy pants, shoes without socks. Johnson is in bad shape, and no better when he bends down to pick up the few coins.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
He picks the coins up, one by one. Suddenly large legs and huge boots step before his face.
LOW ANGLE UP--P.O.V.
On the mammoth towering figure of a gross, perspiring Southern white lawman.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson stands up gingerly, shielding his guitar behind him. Very nervous, he plays the "Tom" completely--so much so that the scene becomes embarrassing and uncomfortable for the viewer too.
LAWMAN: What's this, boy?
JOHNSON (mumbling): Nuthin', suh.
LAWMAN: Whut say, boy? Speak up.
JOHNSON: I jes' playin' mah git-tar.
LAWMAN: Not in this heah town, you don't, boy. Wheah you from?
JOHNSON (darting nervous looks): Memphis, suh. On my way back there, suh.
LAWMAN: Well, you jes' keep movin', y'heah? We don't want no (sarcastic now) big-city nigras comin' in this litta-bitty town o' ours.
Johnson is shifting and shuffling, anxious to be away.
JOHNSON (bobbing his head): Yassuh, I do it...
LAWMAN (off-hand now, bored): All right, boy. Git on you' way now. Ten p.m.'s curfew for culuhed folks. Don' lemme find you heah-'bouts come mawnin'.
JOHNSON: Yassuh, cap'n.
Still bowing and scraping, he scurries off.
EVENING--EXTERIOR FARM
To this ramshackle, back-country farm at twilight comes Johnson. He is dressed as before, carrying his guitar, yet looks somewhat better; we'll see that the scab has healed some too. The black farmer sits on his porch steps whittling.
FARMER: 'Lo.
JOHNSON: (wearily): Mighty low. (sheds his guitar) But it's a nice 'nuff evenin'.
FARMER: Summer come early.
JOHNSON (after a moment): You got somethin' could lay the dust?
ANOTHER ANGLE
Farmer gestures with his whittling knife.
FARMER: Water over there.
JOHNSON: Whiskey mebbe go wid it?
The farmer stops whittling and regards him thoughtfully, then nods at the guitar.
FARMER: Is you kin play that?
JOHNSON (collapsing on the steps): Oh yes, my frien', I do play gittar.
ANGLE ON THE TWO--DOOR BEYOND
The farmer twists around to shout into the house; some children are peeking out already.
FARMER: Yo, Martha! Bring us 'at jar out. (to Robert) Hongry too?
JOHNSON (shrugging): Not so's you'd notice...
He picks up his guitar and begins picking and chording softly, tuning up some. Martha appears in the doorway, nodding shyly and handing the Mason jar of corn liquor to her husband. Then she leans against the doorframe, kids clinging to her skirt and peeking around. Johnson accepts the first drink gladly.
JOHNSON (toasting): Better days. I hope.
He takes a healthy swig and passes it back to the farmer, who drinks more carefully, savoring the taste. Johnson starts a slow blues instrumental.
NIGHT--EXTERIOR PORCH
The music continues over. By the moonlight we see that the children are long gone, the woman is rocking slowly back and forth, Robert is tipsy and consuming the last of the jar's contents, and the farmer is now playing Johnson's guitar.
NIGHT--INTERIOR SHED
Later, Johnson lies snoring in a smushed heap of corn-cobs and straw, inside the farmer's rickety shed. The music slowly fades.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
Still later. Now his sleep is fitful; he struggles and utters a strangled groan--another nightmare...
NIGHT--EXTERIOR CROSSROADS
In pitch-black darkness Johnson stands at a rural crossroads, a town vaguely in the distance. He is nervous, agitated, glancing about fearfully. A mournful howling dog sounds on the track throughout the ensuing brief scenes...
Now distant shouting men too. Johnson's fears mount, but he seems rooted to the spot, unable to move.
ANGLE ON ONE ROAD
As an old sedan speeds past on the crossing road, driven by a white man resembling Dawson the record producer. Johnson, still rooted, tries to flag him down, to no avail.
ANGLE ON DISTANT TOWN--RAPID PAN
The voices are getting louder, as a second car comes speeding from the town. The driver seems to be Johnny, with Betty Mae as his passenger. Jonson waves frantically for them to stop, but the car passes him by. Betty Mae turns to look back as the car speeds away. An incoming vehicle appears beside it, this one seemingly driven by Louise.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson is finally able to move, and he runs into the road to stop this third car. But Louise drives as though she can't see him there, and at the last moment Johnson must leap from the path of the speeding car, rolling off the road.
ANGLE ON TOWN
As Louise's vehicle speeds toward the town--suddenly illuminating a gang of white-hooded figures coming for Johnson.
ANGLE ON HILL
A lone tree looms against the night sky. Up this rise go the men hauling Johnson. One figure throws a rope over a high limb.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
As the hooded men fashion a noose and slip it over his head. They brutally yank him erect till only his toes are touching the ground.
CLOSE ON HOODED LEADER
This menacing figure now removes his hood, revealing himself to be plantation-owner Lubbell. He brandishes his riding crop, striking Johnson lightly across the face, then bursts into maniacal but silent laughter.
ANOTHER ANGLE
One of the other figures steps forward, opening a straight-razor. He stands before Johnson, and Lubbell pulls the hood from his head--it is, of course, black gangster Ras.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
His utter terror; his frantically pleading eyes. Then he simply closes them. (The dog's howling has kept getting louder and louder through all the above.)
CLOSE ON RAS
As he smiles evilly, then lifts the razor and strikes suddenly downwards. The camera image is optically forced to a blood-red, then orange, blankness, dissolving to:
CLOSE ON SUN--ZOOM OUT
Dawn over the farmer's nearby field. Zoom out reveals Johnson seated, leaning against a broken wagon.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
He is drawn and haggard, his eyes bloodshot, traces of straw in his clothing. He stares out across the field, lost in thought, guitar across his lap. Absently, he reaches up to touch the missing mojo bag, then realizes what he is doing and shifts his hands to the guitar. He positions it and begins idly picking, trying out chords and lines as he goes.
JOHNSON: I was standin' at the crossroads... (pause) ...crossroads, an' I could not get...
Hearing voices, he stops and turns.
ANGLE ON THE HOUSE
The farmer and his family have come out on the porch, the children still brushing sleep from their eyes.
ANGLE FROM THE PORCH OUT
Robert stands up, slings the guitar over his back, and waves goodby.
JOHNSON: Thank you.
Close to camera, the farmer and children wave back. The woman calls out to him.
MARTHA: You got to eat some-thin'!
Johnson looks back, already heading off.
JOHNSON: Give mine t' the chil'ren.
The he walks away. When he stumbles momentarily, the watching farmer looks at his wife and speaks for the first time this scene.
FARMER: That boy is livin' fas' time...
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Hellhound 14: The Killing Floor
DAY--INTERIOR RESTAURANT/BAR
A long bar closer to camera, some tables for eating further back. The front window reads "SPIVEY'S" (seen reversed from here inside). Camera view puts Robert and Louise in background; they are huddled together at a table, laughing and talking intimately, though none of their words reach us. The bartender putters around behind his bar. Seated there drinking and watching the happy couple in the reflecting mirror on the wall is a black man, a street hustler type. He finishes his beer and then, whistling, saunters over to the wall phone and begins dialing.
NIGHT--INTERIOR HOTEL ROOM--SLOW ZOOM IN
The room is in total darkness, but the bright neon sign outside the window keeps flashing on and off, adding a pulsating reddish glow to the room. Robert and Louise are in bed; they have likely just had sex because he rolls off from atop her. The two rest happily beside each other, breathing deeply. Then on the soundtrack a mournful howling begins, some unseen hound baying in the distance. Louise shivers and moves closer to Johnson.
LOUISE: Somebody dying...
Her words chill Johnson too--always the superstitious one--but he tries to make light of the continuing sound.
JOHNSON: Naw, baby, settle down. Some ol' hound, one eye on the moon, other on some sweet bitch.
They snuggle together silently then.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Suddenly there is the sound of something crashing into the room door and splintering the wood; the door bursts open, kicked in by the heavy-set, gangsterish man (Louise's keeper Ras) who steps inside, a huge .45 in his hand. Louise has screamed during his entry; closer to the door and Ras, she cowers against Robert.
RAS: Well, well now. Ain't y'all the picture... So, Lou, you an' your cousin here talkin' old times?
Johnson still hasn't moved. Louise tries to recover some, hoping that Ras may be willing to talk. She starts to rise from the bed.
LOUISE: Ras... Please... Don't do anything, please. I'll...
RAS: Cheat on me, bitch.
He shoots her coldly three times. Louise's body sprawls backwards across Johnson--who struggles to cast her aside and tumble to the floor on the far side of the bed. Ras takes two steps closer, aiming for Robert too; but when he fires, the gun jams. He throws it aside, pulling a straight razor from his coat pocket.
RAS: I sooner cut you, nigge', down...
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson manages to escape to the far side of the bed away from the razor. He is weaponless and naked (his body seen only in motion as the pulsating red light continues). Ras closes in on him fast, slashing out. Johnson leaps backwards to avoid the blade but is still nicked on his face, near one eye.
JOHNSON (in shock and pain): Motherfucker!
He stumbles backwards over a chair, his hand knocking a near-empty bottle from the table. Johnson grabs this up from the floor and smashes it on the table edge, holding up the jagged top as his own cutting weapon.
CLOSE ON THE TWO--HAND HELD
A series of quick-cut, in motion, jagged shots of the ensuing fight between razor and bottle-knife. In the flickering reddish light it becomes an obscene dance of death, as much imagined by the viewer as actually seen, in the alternating darkness and light of the room--feinting, slashing, parrying, grappling, circling each other, the two men grunting and perspiring. Robert's face when seen is set and focussed, blood dripping from the cut; Ras in contrast looks manic, even evil, a grim smile frozen on his mouth. The light flickers on razor, bottle, teeth, and sweating flesh.
Finally, in a lit moment, the two grapple close again. Ras starts a swing of his razor, and Johnson steps inside that slash as the light goes off again. In the moment of darkness there is the sound of a blow and a terrifying scream. A body falls as the returning half-light reveals Johnson (minus his neckbag now) standing over the bloody body of Ras, whose face is a pulpy mess. (The dog's howling has continued throughout all this frantic action; now it stops.) Johnson kicks at the fallen man; when there is no response, he wearily drops the bloody bottle-knife beside the body.
JOHNSON: Lord Jesus...
He grasps for his lucky bag--and it's not there! He looks about in sudden panic. But...
ANGLE ON THE DOOR
Now Robert becomes aware of pounding feet coming up the unseen stairs outside the room.
MAN'S VOICE: Ras! Ras! Everything all right?
Already Johnson has been grabbing up his clothes and guitar. With no more than a glance at Louise's body, still naked himself, he dives out the open window onto a fire escape.
NIGHT--EXTERIOR FIRE ESCAPE
Tumbling down the metal stairs, dropping some clothing as he scrambles, yanking his trousers on at a staggered run, he leaps down to the ground. From the window above two black men shout and fire wildly after him, but he escapes into the alley darkness.
((END OF SECTION 3))
Saturday, August 9, 2008
Hellhound 13: Louise, Louise
NIGHT--INTERIOR SALOON
A dark and dingy gutbucket hangout for black millworkers and down-and-outers. Rough-looking men and a few hard women drink and talk. Johnson is seated on a chair in one corner, ostensibly playing for the customers though no one is listening. He gloomily picks and strums a slow instrumental--the sound of which carries through the next few scenes.
DAY--EXTERIOR STREET
Robert drunk, paper sack-wrapped bottle in his hand, wandering aimlessly through rainy, blustery Chicago slum. He stops in the scanty covering offered by the overhead elevated train tracks; tipsily reeling, he stands drinking and looking at nothing as an "El" train goes by overhead.
NIGHT--INTERIOR HOUSE
Robert, Big Bill (seen earlier), both with their guitars, plus a piano player, an upright bass man, and a cornetist, as well as a trio of young women (one on Robert's lap), all sprawled happily in the plush parlor of a fancy-house, passing marijuana cigarettes, taking deep drags and then giggling and coughing--and all the while attempting to play between hits.
DAY--EXTERIOR STREET--MOVING
The instrumental music slowly comes to an end as Robert wanders now in a bright, fresh spring morning. The world and he look a whole lot better. People smile and nod and yell greetings. Kids run around underfoot. He tips his hat to older people. Then, suddenly, a half-block away, Robert sees a woman who looks very much like Louise, entering an apartment building with parcels in her arms. She vanishes within and, too late, he runs down the block and on into her building.
INTERIOR APARTMENT BUILDING
Robert dashes into the hallway hoping to see Louise, but she has disappeared. No one is in sight. He looks at the unlabeled individual doors, and then starts calling out:
JOHNSON: Louise! (no response, so again louder) Louise!
One door opens and a little girl sticks her head out; she looks at him silently.
JOHNSON: Hello, darlin'. Kin you he'p me? (girl nods) Is they a purty woman name' Louise live here 'bouts?
The little girl silently nods again.
JOHNSON: Well, where she at then?
Still silent she points up the stairs. Robert turns and sprints up the stairway without thanking her.
UPPER HALLWAY AND DOORS
Johnson surges up into view and stops to survey the several doors on this floor. He shrugs, steps up to the closest one, and knocks.
LOUISE'S VOICE: Who is it?
She is already opening the door as he responds.
JOHNSON: Me. Robert.
Louise halts the half-open door and stares coolly at Johnson.
LOUISE: Robert. No. I tol' you to stay away.
JOHNSON: Yeah, you did. An' I did it--till I seen you jes' now on the block. Eyesight to the blind, baby. I need you, Louise--devil come som'ever.
He pushes his way inside.
INTERIOR APARTMENT
Louise does not retreat, and the two of them stand just inside the half-open door.
LOUISE: Damn you, Robert. I want you too. But we can't. I'm scared of him--he beats me some already, and he'd kill us for sure wi' this.
JOHNSON: Leave his turf then. Got to be somewheres safe. Come on wid me...
LOUISE (drawn to him, wanting it, thinking) Wait, I got a cousin lives in Joliet. I could say I'm visiting her...
JOHNSON: Le's go, baby. Right now.
LOUISE: Just like that?
Now Robert smiles and shoves the door closed behind her.
JOHNSON: Well... mebbe somethin' else come first...
DAY--EXTERIOR BUS
Through a light rain now, a Thirties-style bus moves along a highway. In the background looms a grim, forbidding, greystone prison.
INTERIOR BUS
Robert and Louise are seated together towards the rear of the mostly empty bus; the prison can be seen outside in the distance. Louise is happily talking, while Robert strums his guitar quietly.
LOUISE: So then I come north, on my own. I wasn't gonna wind up some dirt farmer's wife or white woman's house gal. I was a waitress for a while, then I worked as a ten-cent dancer at the Dixie Ballroom. That's where he found me. Oh, it was fun at first--all the attention an' the presents Ras give. But then he set me up in that apartment, and he just keeps me there, waitin' on him to visit. Lord, like to break my mind.
JOHNSON: Mebbe we do somethin' about that...
He points out the window at the distant buildings.
JOHNSON: Is that a prison over there?
LOUISE: Joliet Pen'tentiary. Big and ugly, isn't it? Colored go in there an' never come out.
JOHNSON: Ain' nobody never gonn' cage me like that. Crackers love to catch 'em a black man. I go down dead first...
The two of them fall silent, huddled together on the bus.
DAY--INTERIOR HOTEL ROOM
Robert and Louise are lounging around--Robert likely naked under the sheet, propped up watching her, his lucky bag prominent against his chest. Louise is in her underwear, going methodically through the pockets of his pants, talking as she goes. The first item she pulls out is a rolled-up guitar string.
LOUISE: What's this, Robert? I thought we agreed: No strings attached!
JOHNSON (lazily): That G-string look mighty right on you.
Louise glances at him and smiles.
LOUISE: Go 'head with that. (holds it to her leg like a garter) Rather tie it 'round your big ol' root, pull you 'round after me...
Robert laughs and stretches.
CLOSE ON LOUISE
She dumps all the coins from his pocket and counts them silently, then:
LOUISE: Some big spender. Total out at four dollars, 'leven cents. What we get back to Chicago on?
ANOTHER ANGLE
Johnson sits up in bed.
JOHNSON: I play somewheres, pick up mo' change. You know I gots to head south, to Dallas, come June--cut some mo' records.
Louise is suddenly sad.
LOUISE: Oh Robert... that's less than a month. Then I'm lef' to Ras again.
JOHNSON: Come wid me if yo' want.
She doesn't answer, instead goes fishing at the bottom of his last pocket--and pulls out the same old lipstick top Johnson has been using to play slide throughout most of the film. Now her eyes flash saucily.
LOUISE: Which one o' your gals give you this?
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
He closes his eyes for a moment, effected by the sudden memory.
JOHNSON: Was a gif' for someone I knowed a long time gone.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Louise has detected something in his voice. She jumps up and strides over to the open window. Before Robert realizes what she intends, she hurls the lipstick top out through the billowing curtains. Then she turns around, striking a pose, hands on hips.
LOUISE: All you gonna carry from now on is what I give you!
Now she runs from the window and jumps on top of him. They tumble back laughing on the bed.
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Hellhound 12: Kick 'Em On Down
NIGHT--INTERIOR HALLWAY OF APARTMENT BUILDING
The camera is jammed in amongst the men and women packed into this first-floor space (hall, stairwell, and open door to small apartment) where a house rent party is in full swing--shouts, laughter, and the resonant echoes from an Armstrong/Oliver New Orleans-styled jazz group arranged on the upper stairs. Johnson and Johnny are present, now in dapper suits and flashy hats, Johnny talking to chums, Robert roaming restlessly, his eyes alert for some attractive and available woman. Several in the crowd speak to him.
MAN: Hey, Bob, you rootin' groun' hog--you gonn' play t'night or me?
JOHNSON: Say, Bill. Mought's well us bof'.
WOMAN: When you comin' to see me, daddy?
Johnson smiles and points at her companion, who takes no offense at his remark.
JOHNSON: When you ditch him.
ANOTHER MAN (holding up rolled cigarettes): I got muggles here that is the mezz. Getcha high as Geo'gia pines, my man...
Johnson waves him off.
JOHNSON: Mebbe later, Blinky.
Now he stops and stares at someone across the crowded area.
O.S. JOHNSON--MOVING
Ahead of Johnson we see Louise, small, sexy, and a rich brown color, with carefully processed and coiffed hair. She is talking with some girlfirends. Robert moves towards her through the crowd; she notices as he draws near, coolly staring back at him.
JOHNSON: Hello, sweetmeat.
LOUISE (disdainful): Somethin' you want?
JOHNSON: You.
With no more introduction than that, he takes her arm and tugs her away with him. The girlfriends are surprised; Louise reacts angrily at first, trying to yank free. Then she shrugs and acquiesces, going along for the ride. She throws a not-to-worry smile back at her friends.
DAWN--INTERIOR HOTEL ROOM
The furnishings are merely adequate. Johnson is asleep in the bed; Louise is dressing, almost ready to depart. Johnson stirs on the bed and reaches over to where she should be sleeping beside him:
JOHNSON: Louise...
No body there, he opens his eyes and looks around.
JOHNSON: Louise? (seeing her) Hey, baby, what you doin'?
ANGLE ON MIRROR
Louis is straightening her dress in front of the mirror, Johnson reflected in the glass.
LOUISE (business-like): Leavin', Robert. I'm goin'.
JOHNSON (lazily): Ain' no rush. Wait up an' I go 'long witcha.
LOUISE: No! (turns to face him) No, daddy. You can't. Last night was good, but this is today. You ain't a part of my life, an' you can't be...
JOHNSON (sitting up): Wha'cha mean, woman. We got a passle o' nights headin' to us.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Louise has her make-up out now, but she pauses to walk over to the bed and put her arms on Robert's shoulders, keeping him on the bed.
LOUISE: No, Robert. I like you. A lot. But you are courtin' death around me. I got me a steady-rollin' man, a man of means. And he is mean enough to see you dead if he found out about this.
She looks into his eyes for a moment, then walks over to pick up her hat and purse, dropping the unused make-up inside the purse. Johnson rises from the bed, grabbing for his trousers, still bare-chested.
JOHNSON: What are you mumblin' on at?
LOUISE: Get back from me now. I'm tellin' you they's no way for us. Don't even look for me...
And with this parting warning she dashes to the door and hurries on out. Johnson is still trying to pull on the second leg of his pants. He hobbles over to the door after her, but she has already vanished.
DAY--INTERIOR CAFE
Robert and Johnny are sitting across from each other in the small restaurant seen earlier during their Southside jaunt. Johnny is wolfing down a plate of barbecued ribs and greens. Robert's similar plate is largely untouched; he is focussed instead on a another bottle.
JOHNNY (smacking his lips): Now these is ribs, nigger. Kin smell the Delta drippin' off'n 'em. Make me homesick. Say, what about that? You 'bout ready to head South agin? This big city ain't sit right...
JOHNSON: I like it fine.
CLOSER ANGLE
On each of them in turn as their dialogue proceeds.
JOHNNY (looks at him admiringly): You the tush-hog, ain'cha. Git-tar an' a gal, strum on 'em both, is all you wants. Where' you get to las' night, anyways?
Johnson simply shrugs, pours himself another drink.
JOHNNY (eating again): I trustin' you ain't go wi' that big-leg woman I see you talkin' at. That Nubian princess is somethin' fine--skin like coffee an' cream, um, um. But I axed about her an' she's a bad 'un. Lady frien' to the man wit all the action here-'bouts. He's the ba-ad mothe'fuyer, folks say...
JOHNSON: That so? Ain' no truck wid me.
He empties the glass, thrusts it aside, and upends the bottle instead, then:
JOHNSON: Got us a gig tomorr' evenin'. Uptown, John--an' no bucket o' blood neither. (grins evilly with the bottle poised) White folks time, for when they comes a-studyin' at the Nee-gros. Well, the coins what I studyin', an' white ones spen' fine too. Club suit you, I 'spect?
Johnny is indeed excited at the prospect, waving a rib around as he answers.
JOHNNY: Hell, yes, Bob--that's travelin' money. I never did see nobody for luck like you--you musta been conjuratin' that bag again.
Johnson touches his lucky bag.
JOHNSON: Big Bill set it, truly--took me in t' meet the man. But my luck done met a woman done hoodoo me some, I b'lieve...
Johnny stops eating to look at Robert curiously. But Johnson has his head tipped back, glugging the whiskey down.
NIGHT--INTERIOR CLUB
A bar, several tables, and a small bandstand; a few white couples seated waiting. The clock over the bar reads exactly 9:00, but the owner is already drumming his fingers on the bar impatiently. Robert swaggers in, followed somewhat cautiously by Johnny. Both have their guitars and Robert has a sack-wrapped bottle.
OWNER: Where the hell you been? I said nine o'clock, ready to play.
JOHNSON (grinning tipsily): Tha's what it is, an' tha's what I is. An' Johnny too, my ass-istant here. (laughs)
He upends the bottle to drink two last swallows, then shakes the remaining drops out sadly and sets the empty carefully on the bar. Meanwhile Johnny is looking around nervously.
JOHNSON: Keep the whiskey comin' , boss, an' we play ya a mess o' blues.
ANOTHER ANGLE
The two musicians walk to the bandstand and clamber up, Johnny still nervous, Robert too tipsy to care. As they tune up, Robert dons the same old lipstick top for his little finger, and starts talking to the audience.
JOHNSON: Good evenin', peoples. How you-all be gettin' on?
There is no answer, though one woman titters.
JOHNSON: Me an' John here gonn' see is you folks ready--see kin you kick 'em on down. (louder, to the owner) Say, Mist' Clark, where's 'at drink at you promise'? (to the audience) Mist' Clark, see, he the man in this be-yoo-tiful club we all be sittin' in, an' mos'ly drinkin' too.
The bartender arrives with two shot glasses. Johnny nods his thanks and sets his aside, but Johnson tosses his off and motions for a refill.
JOHNSON: Some ol' fool tol' me white folks was jes' black folks after they's ceased--he say y'all ain't got no soul a-tall 'lessin' it be sto'-bought...
Johnny is just as stunned as the audience at this effrontery. There are some mutterings, and Johnny reaches over to pull at Johnson's arm.
JOHNNY: Hush up, Bob. Le's be playin' now.
CLOSE ON JOHNSON
But Robert goes blithely on.
JOHNSON: Oh, I tol' that fool he was a liar---yes sir. Lord have mercy, ain' none o' mine--we is jes' poor Ethiopian musicianers. I knows you white folks get the blues jes' like us...
Then he rolls his eyes in minstrel-show exaggeration and launches straight into an upbeat dance number, Johnny scrambling to catch up in the arrangement.
ANGLE ON SHOT GLASSES--ZOOM OUT
Three empty glasses beside Robert now on another chair. He looks drunker, Johnny tireder, and the crowd has dwindled some, except that a new couple is sitting close to the stage, the woman eyeing Johnson somewhat appreciatively. The two musicians are retuning and talking.
JOHNNY: Ain't found her yet. But I reckon we goin' to Memphis nex' t' look...
JOHNSON (staring now at the nearby woman): You know how lonesome it get sleepin' all by you'se'f... (laughing at his own recklessness) Well, you swing mine an' I swing yours, sweet chile.
Now he's laughing so hard he starts coughing too.
ANOTHER ANGLE
The woman looks more amused than offended, but the boyfriend is on his feet coming for Johnson. The owner quickly interposes himself and stops the angry man, murmuring soothing words. Meanwhile, Johnny has sized things up and he quickly moves over to Johnson (still coughing and laughing), steps in and clobbers him on the jaw, knocking Robert off his chair, guitar flying and crashing into the empty shot glasses. Robert tumbles to the floor and is too surprised or too drunk to move.
The owner points at Johnson's collapsed condition to mollify the boyfriend, then he escorts the couple to the door, motioning for others to leave too.
OWNER (calling out): Sorry, folks, closing early tonight...
Then he strides back to the stage area where Johnny is kneeling beside Robert.
ANGLE ON THE THREE
Robert actually looks peaceful.
OWNER: Get up, you bum. You're fired.
JOHNSON (laughing again): Cain't fire me--I jes' quit.
OWNER (to Johnny): Go on, get him out of here before I call the cops. I don't need no black bastard causin' trouble in my club, and I especially don't want his black ass bleedin' in here.
JOHNNY: Yes-suh...
But when Johnny tries to help him up, Robert knocks his hands away and rises slowly on his own. Johnny picks up both guitars and heads for the door.
ANGLE BACK TOWARD THE BANDSTAND
Johnson walks with drunken dignity to the door, the white owner still standing by the stage glaring after him. At the door, Johnson stops, turns around, and in a parody of Johnny's brand of charm, gives a foolish half-bow.
JOHNSON: Thank you all for a lovely evenin'.
Laughing again, he staggers on out.
NIGHT--EXTERIOR CLUB--MOVING
Outside the club, however, Johnson stops laughing. He stares at the nervous Johnny without saying anything at first--simply holds out his hand for his guitar and then staggers off, shrugging the strap up and over his head. Johnny follows along too.
JOHNNY: Why you haveta get unruly? You ain't jes' drunk, I know that. But you is gone crazy, mouthin' like that to a goddam room full o' crackers. You be whupped at leas', mebbe strung up, ifen I ain' knock y' upside the head...
Johnson refuses to look at his friend, instead talks as though to a third party.
JOHNSON: Lissen at the house nigger. Thinks he knows his way aroun' white folks. (slowly now, emphasizing each syllable) Ain't that jes' some-thin' now.
He stops short and addresses Johnny straight on.
JOHNSON: Son, you is shit t' those peckerwoods an' shit t' me. They walk all over you' head an' you be sayin' "Thankya, thankya," an' done lick the boots clean. Tell you what, John--you ain' tell me how t' live, an' I ain' tell you how t' play.
Then he walks on. Johnny draws back injured, but walks after him.
JOHNNY: Hell sakes, Bob. You ain't livin', you's dyin'... Ever since Betty Mae done lef', you got some kinda mean shit in you that's jes' got to git out!
JOHNSON (musing to himself sarcastically): Why I hole up in dis-yeah crappe' town wid a dumb spaginzy like you...
Johnny has had enough insults, and he asserts his dignity.
JOHNNY: I ain't so dumb. Huh. Think you kin smile an' sass yo' way through anything. Well, that ain't it. This world is white man's, Robert. Ifen you black, git on back! I knows it--an' I know where I be livin' better'n this ruckus. If you be smart, you git right an' ride wid me...
CLOSE ON THE TWO
Johnson looks at him scornfully.
JOHNSON: Tuck yo' tail 'tween yo' laigs, ol' monkey man. I'm set right here.
JOHNNY: That's it, then. Reckon I see you somewheres else, some other time.
He holds out his hand for a farewell handshake. But Johnson scorns the gesture and walks away.
JOHNSON: Not in this life, burrhead.
ANOTHER ANGLE--MOVING
Johnny shakes his head sadly, watching Robert go. Then he turns and heads the other way. Johnson keeps moving a distance further. Then he stops to look back. But Johnny has vanished, and Robert seems surprised--evidently expected him still to be following along.
JOHNSON: Johnny?
No answer. He shrugs and moves off into the darkness.
Labels:
Big Bill Broonzy,
Johnny Shines,
Louise,
Nightclub,
Southside Chicago
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Hellhound 11: Sweet Home Chicago
((The third section begins here.))
NIGHT--EXTERIOR REDLIGHT DISTRICT--MOVING
The first of several brief scenes detailing Johnson's several-months' descent into seamier aspects of the bluesman's "Sportin' Life"; on the soundtrack throughout is his rocking, bitterly violent "32-20" with its lines like these:
I sent for my baby, an' she don't come (repeat)
All the doctors in Hot Springs sho' cain't he'p her none...
An' if she gets unruly, things she don' want to do (repeat)
Take my 32-20, man, an' cut her half in two...
In this first scene Johnson and two low-lifers wander drunkenly in the redlight district of some town, carousing, shoving each other, pawing at the street women.
NIGHT--EXTERIOR WOODEN STAIRWAY
Johnson following a chippie up the rickety stairs to her second-floor "crib," grabbing at her and drinking from a bottle. At the top of the stairs, she opens the door and starts inside, but he stops to stand teetering dangerously, head back to guzzle down the last of the whiskey. Then he smashes the bottle down into the alley below, staggers over to the woman, and vanishes inside.
DAY--EXTERIOR COUNTRY JUKEJOINT
Johnson is playing cards with another man, the game called Georgia Skin, flipping the cards over from the top of the deck. Thee are a few onlookers and Robert has another bottle at his elbow. He takes a snort, rubs his lucky bag, winks at the folks watching, licks his thumb ostentatiously, and then flips over the Jack of Diamonds--which wins the hand and a great deal of (unheard) congratulations from the watchers.
NIGHT--INTERIOR BEDROOM
Johnson and another chippie are in a well-furnished hotel room, elaborately sniffing cocaine, fumbling at each other, giggling and laughing and ending in a heap on the bed.
DAY--INTERIOR BLACK CLUB
Johnson sits slumped over a table, drunk again, barely conscious. At the outside door, across the room, his friend Johnny appears; the barman meets him and points over to Robert. Johnny comes gloomily over and begins the difficult task of getting Johnson up on his feet and out of the club. Robert reacts with drunken affection at the sight of his old friend.
The music has continued throughout, but now there is a harsh, nerve-jangling sound, as a 78 record player's steel needle scrapes across a record, stopping it in mid-phrase, and:
DAY--INTERIOR WHOREHOUSE
We see Johnson standing beside an old-fashioned, bell-horn, wind-up victrola; he has just stopped the record as heard. Robert and Johnny are in the sitting room parlor of a plush, New Orleans-style black whorehouse. He turns to face Johnny again, tipsy this time rather than incapacitated.
JOHNSON (giggling): He, he, he. Wha' chu think o' that, nigger? You' ol' buddy Robert on record...
CLOSE ON JOHNNY
He is quite subdued--puzzled by his friend's belligerant attitude, and working at keeping the peace.
JOHNNY: Soundin' good, Bob. I been hearin' you all aroun'.
ANOTHER ANGLE
As Johnson hurls the disc across the room at Johnny.
JOHNSON: Bet you' raggedy ass!
But his aim is bad, and it hits a nearby Tiffany-style lamp instead, which crashes to the floor.
JOHNSON: Fame an' fortune you done tol' me to grab aholt of!
Johnny kneels to pick up the broken lamp.
JOHNNY: You sho' nuff grab on t' some-thin'. What in hell's eatin' on you anyways?
ANGLE ON DOOR
As the madam and one of her girls come hurrying in to check on the clatter. Madam swears when she sees the lamp's condition.
MADAM: More o' your dam-fool doin's, Robert Johnson. I don't care what kinda killer musician you is, I won't have this in my house.
Johnson lunges unsteadily over to wrap himself around the other girl; he squeezes a breast and she struggles to break free.
JOHNSON: You kin squeeze my lemon, baby.
The angry Madam shoves him away from her girl.
MADAM: Ain't I tol' you 'bout that too? Keep you' ham-hocks offa my girls, lessen you payin' your way. Johnny, you get this dumb country boy out o' here!
The two women stalk out.
ANOTHER ANGLE
Robert is weaving back and forth.
JOHNSON: G'on, you b.d. bitch. If you cain't sell it, sit on it! I ain' take no pigmeat an' sowbelly offen you!
Then he collapses on the couch. Johnny has watched the preceding sadly. Now he walks over to pat Johnson awkwardly on the shoulder.
JOHNNY: Come on, Bob. Le's you an' me find us somewhere's else to easy ride.
Johnson frets and mumbles.
JOHNSON: ... ain' seen Chicago...
JOHNNY (helping him up): That's it--mebbe we roll on up Big Muddy, bust you' conk in Chicago-town..
And they stumble toward the door.
DAY--EXTERIOR STREET--MOVING
A crowded street in Southside Chicago, black people of all ages passing, sitting on front stoops, kids playing in the street. Robert and Johnny are walking along, carrying their guitars and valises. They are dressed in their good clothes, but compared to the big-city folk they look a bit back-woods. The two of them seem slightly awed by the hustle and bustle and gab going on all around.
ANGLE ON STREET CORNER
Finally they muster the nerve to approach two rakish hipster-hustlers, dressed to the nines in the height of black Thirties fashion (not yet zoot suits, but flashy). The city guys exchange a look and a rib-dig suggesting something like "Let's get these hicks."
JOHNNY: 'Scuse me, gents, can you tell me...
FIRST HUSTLER (interrupting, to his buddy): Say, bro', looka these two hankachief heads from down yonder, brushin' at the cuckaburrs in their wig, ya dig? All jumped up to pick out what's goin' down in windy ol' Chicago town. I kin tell by the drape o' they vines (fingering the wrinkles in Johnson's baggy jacket) they has de-signs.
Johnson pulls away, surprised. Talker Johnny's jaw is still hanging.
SECOND HUSTLER (to Johnson): Don't mind my signifyin' man, this here Dapper Dan with the built-in tan. They calls me Lewis 'cause I gives 'em bliss--I got my shit, grit, an' mother-wit in-tact. (now to Johnny) So whatcha need, doodley-deed? You lookin' to grease you' chops, or Lindy Hop? Mebbe get tall an' have a ball? Lay it on me, jeff--name you' gig an' we all dig!
FIRST HUSTLER (laughing): Lewis, that' some hincty jive. Jes' slip me five.
ANOTHER ANGLE
They slap hands while Robert and Johnny stand there still confused--should they be angry? are these street dudes still speaking English or some bizarre variation? They look at each other for an answer, but neither knows.
JOHNNY: Uh... say whut? I ain't unnerstan' all that.
SECOND HUSTLER: We's rhymin' it an' chimin' it. Give you the gate to ease you' weight--he'p you get hip, foxy an' fly. Stick wid it an' you got to git it!
JOHNNY: Uh, thanks... I guess.
ROBERT (getting angry): Jes' tell us the way to the Black-an'-Tan club.
The first hustler hits the strings of Johnson's guitar.
FIRST HUSTLER: Well, dog my cats--two razor-leg, slewfoot, mojo men from way behin' the sun come nawth to moan an' holler an' blow the blues from kin to cain't. Ain't they somethin', Lewis?
SECOND HUSTLER: Somethin' else, Daniel. (to Robert) All reet, big feet, 'fore you cain't see for lookin', here's the route you is be tookin'... (and he winks at his partner)
ANGLE ON CORNER
At this point, Johnson's song called "Sweet Home Chicago" begins on the track, drowning out those directions--though we see them acted out in all their elaborate glory. Hustler Lewis points this way and that, waves his arms in circles, names numerous streets, and counts blocks on his fingers. Robert is antsy and suspicious, but Johnny restrains him and pays close attention, trying to duplicate the airy map along with Lewis. The active scene looks like some weird game of charades.
Finally the directions end. Johnny shakes hands with both guys, and Robert nods coolly. As they stride purposefully off carrying all their gear, the hustlers burst out laughing, collapsing against each other in great glee.
ANOTHER ANGLE--MOVING
Further down the street, the hustlers visible in the distance. Johnny looks at Robert and shrugs; Johnson shakes his head, still not sure what has just happened. "Sweet Home Chicago" continues through the following brief scenes:
EXTERIOR SHOP--MOVING
Robert and Johnny passing a "good luck" store, its display windows filled with an amazing variety of powders and philtres, religious statues and dream books, voodoo artifacts and conjure bags, bones and roots and herbs. Johnny is amused and lingers to look, but Robert nervously hurries on, fingering the lucky bag around his neck.
EXTERIOR CAFE--MOVING
A hole-in-the-wall cafe devoted to soul food, with handwritten signs advertising "sweet potato pie," "red beans & rice," "chitterlings," and "downhome cooking." Again Johnny is willing to stop, but Robert wants to press on and get where they're bound.
EXTERIOR INTERSECTION
The two are now on a corner amidst a crowd of black people. A black policeman is in the street directing traffic, and they marvel at this, to them, strange sight. Then they cross the street with their burdens, bumped and jostled some by the other folks hurrying on.
EXTERIOR HOUSE--MOVING
The two now passing a house of ill repute with several stunning and fetchingly attired young women arrayed in the windows. This time Robert is the one who wants to linger, but Johnny pulls him on.
EXTERIOR STREET CORNER
The two peer up at a street sign, trying to get their bearings. They look around at the various directional options, confer on their memories, finally decide which way to go, pick up their gear again and move off.
EXTERIOR BARBERSHOP--MOVING
Now they are passing a black barber shop, but this one looks somewhat ritzier than Lucky's back in Memphis. Discreet dark drapes line the window, and there's a cost placard in the door glass; name sign above the door reads "CONK-EROR JONES, TONSORIALIST." Johnny points at the cost of a hair treatment and shakes his head at this outrageous figure.
EXTERIOR STREET CORNER
They are evidently nearing their goal at last, weary but heartened to see this particular corner. Johnny signals the new direction with his head and holds up two fingers for the two blocks left to go. They stagger off again.
EXTERIOR STREET--PAN
Robert and Johnny coming towards the lens, looking more eager; camera pans around to follow as they turn the last corner and stop suddenly, shocked to see...
EXTERIOR STOCKYARDS
A wide view of the cattle pens at the vast Chicago Stockyards, hundreds of beeves milling about and lowing loudly, their noise drowning out the last few bars of the Johnson song that's accompanied their long trek across Chicago's Southside.
CLOSE ON THE TWO
After their initial surprise, Johnny is laughing, Robert angry at first but then finally chuckling too. A final loud "Moo-oo" ends the sequence.
Labels:
32-20,
Chicago Stockyards,
Hipsters,
Johnny Shines,
Sweet Home Chicago,
Whorehouse
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