One weathercaster called it a “must-see light and shadow show
by the Old Master Himself,” but I can’t say this last solar eclipse
was worthy of the recommendation. Not even total, and staged
(in my location anyway) behind a thick cloud cover that served
only to diffuse the vivid contrasts essential to any dramatic effect,
the “Old Master” might have been faxing it in from deep space
somewhere for all the incandescence it could claim. Quite
frankly, as light shows go, I thought more interesting work was
being done at the Electric Circus back in the '60s.
Now let’s please not have any misunderstandings. I’m aware
that I’m criticizing the performance of a venerable figure who,
over the eons and in every conceivable form and category, has
compiled an impressive oeuvre. If I have to confess that a lot of
His stuff is not to my taste, that I find much of it heavy-handed or
impenetrable (when, indeed, it is not distracted and slack), this
doesn’t mean I’ve failed to recognize the enormous contribution
He’s made.
I’m thinking, of course, of the models some of His stunning
manipulations of the more volatile natural elements provided for
the Irwin Allen disaster films. And, to be sure, there’s His
introduction of death itself which, brilliantly counterbalancing His
earlier invention of genders and sex, forestalled the unwieldy
prospect of twenty-thousand expansion teams in just the
American League East (and, say, the 2006 playoffs extending
well into the 2018 season). But that’s hardly been the limit of this
remarkable innovation’s reach and impact. In its absence,
"Scream 2," which everyone agrees was even better than
"Scream," would doubtless have languished in perpetual
turnaround since filmgoers would have found the emotions of
fear and panic depicted in the original much too weird and
elusive for a sequel to ever be greenlighted.
What’s more, we can be reasonably certain that the popular
denouement of the “happy ending”—the product of an inevitable
backlash—would never have been developed.
So while it’s often, for me, like feeling obliged to respect
whatever that was that Marcel Marceau used to do, even as you
knew that one more minute of it and your lungs were going to
erupt with blood, I’m more than prepared to honor the “Old
Master’s” achievements. It’s just that I’m not what you’d call a
huge fan. What puts me off most is...well...it’s His LORDLY
attitude. I could forgive Him a lot—yes, even those tedious
revivals of His wind-and-water specials that take out half a
state—were He less disdainful of His audience, less willfully
opaque and ambiguous. I know this “mysterious ways” thing is a
cornerstone of His persona and I can understand His reluctance
to give it up. But, bordering on the pathological, His aversion to
making His meanings known is wearing a little thin, don’t you
think?
I’ll allow that, however disappointing it may be, it’s ultimately of
small consequence when He mounts a shoddy eclipse. But it’s
something else again when, for one especially egregious
example, He leaves you to blow out all your circuits trying to
figure just where Hannity and Colmes fit into the notion that if
you’re on the planet it’s for a reason.
Copyright 2004
Recent fiction and essays have been published on the websites of, Drexel Online Journal, Facsimilation,
Muse Apprentice Guild, Nuvein Magazine, Retort Magazine, Unlikely Stories, Buzzle and Sweet Fancy Moses.
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