Wednesday 10 April 2024

Captain Beefheart - The Cult & Manipulation of Trout Mask Replica

 

The legend of Captain Beefheart is one of music's most looney tunes tales, of an unbalanced maverick who ran a cult-like regime on his bandmates through out most of his career in the Magic Band. But in 1969 it reached its apex. Not allowing bandmembers to leave the house they were practicing in, only allowing one member to leave once a week to pick-up food supplies. No sleep, lack of food and the constant practicing of the Trout Mask Replica songs slowly drove them insane. In preparation, the band rehearsed Van Vliet's difficult compositions for eight months, isolated living communally in a small rented house in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles.  Later recorded between August 1968 – March 1969 and released in June 1969. Don had persuaded them that chicks and sex would interfere with their music, and so they played day and night, day and night. Unfortunately there was no money either and they starved, came down with illnesses, and were found wandering in search of food – one of them in a woman's dress, boots and a helmet, a crazed look in his eyes. Eventually they all left, some to return, but most to find food and recuperate and maybe even find a job with a band that made just a little money.

According to John French and Bill Harkleroad, these sessions often included physical violence. French described the situation as "cultlike", and a visiting friend said that "the environment in that house was positively Manson-esque". Their material circumstances also were dire. With no income other than welfare and contributions from relatives, the band survived on a bare subsistence diet. French recounted living on no more than a small cup of soybeans a day for a month, and at one point, band members were arrested for shoplifting food (whereupon Zappa bailed them out). A visitor described their appearance as "cadaverous" and said that "they all looked in poor health". Band members were restricted from leaving the house and practiced for fourteen or more hours a day. Van Vliet once told drummer John French that he had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, and he would see nonexistent conspiracies that explained this behavior. There was also punishment dished out to the band members. To explain The Barrel, we shall lean on a vignette put forth by John French, otherwise known as Drumbo, no prizes for guessing what he played. When he was drafted in, he recalled making a mistake one session and having Vliet fly off the proverbial handle. Vliet commanded Drumbo to “get in the barrel”. Unwittingly he climbed into the old beer cask at the behest of the Captain. Therein, Vliet repeatedly struck the barrel with a stick and berated Drumbo’s performance with a fury akin to the Devil’s father on the sidelines of a football game. Don would even make the band sit around late at night  and listen to his girlfriend read Salvador Dali - Diary Of A Genius (1963) & The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris (1967). They would go to bed at 1am and then wake up at 10am and start all over. The band slept on the floor in sleeping bags, except for Don and his girl, who had the master bedroom. Don would get up around 12pm-1pm then go to the piano and work on songs.

Undoubtedly, Don Van Vliet was a larger-than-life individual, both irrational, tyranical and manipulative, someone for whom mythic status seemed not so much appropriate as inevitable. Thompson boasts that “his life resists all attempts at demystification” (99). This kind of hyperbole amounts to a virtual matter of reflex when the subject was said to have gone for a year and a half without sleep; possessed three-and-a-half inch ears; was able to know phones would ring before the signal sounded; once sold a vacuum cleaner to Aldous Huxley; and submitted a bill to his record label for the damage to a studio's surrounding oaks and cedars because he believed the recording process in which he and the Magic Band had participated upset their equilibrium (99). Inspiration wise the Captain was listening to a lot of Ornette Coleman, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Harry Partch, Albert Ayler and the new wave of tape composers such as Pauline Oliveros, Terry Riley and Steve Reich, who's song Come Out would be on constant rotation all night while they smoked pot and rolled their eyeballs in circles.

When commenting on Captain Beefheart, writers seem to have found themselves in a situation regarding Beefheart comparable to that of the reporter, played by Edmund O'Brien, in John Ford's The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence (1962) who asserts at the conclusion, “When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.” The true story of Trout Mask was astonishing enough, but although near-starvation had long been associated with artistic endeavour, fist fights, tyranny and “brainwashing” sessions weren't such attractive selling points to the Woodstock generation. All that was kept under wraps and over time Van Vliet has been instead quoted, or paraphrased, as saying that the Magic Band worked by telepathy; or that [Mark] Boston had only been playing bass for six months, and [Bill] Harkleroad the guitar for seven months on joining, or that he had written all the music in eight and a half hours at the piano with variously named [John] French or [Victor] Hayden frantically transcribing his fevered outpourings; or that they regularly rehearsed for twenty hours a day; or that he had not left the Ensenada Drive house for over three years. Outside the claustrophobic mental assault course of life at the house, Van Vliet was generous in his praise of the musicians. But he was also unequivocal in taking credit for both writing and arranging all the music. And the myth was certainly helped by his portrayal of the musicians as idiot savant types who had never played before and whom he had taught from scratch. But in effect he did teach them from scratch. Certainly none of them would have come up with anything like Trout Mask Replica on their own. When he was over in London on press duties with Zappa, Van Vliet was asked by Zig Zag if the group were involved in music before the Magic Band. He made the point: “They were always involved, but now they're playing.” And later to Elliott Wald from Oui he said: “The musicians worked so hard at it. They were born on that Album.” (Barnes Citation119–20).

Chronologically, guitarist Harkleroad broke ranks first when in 1998 he published his pained recollections of participation in the band between 1968 and 1974: Lunar Notes: Zoot Horn Rollo's Captain Beefheart Experience. Raised in the desert communities of California where Van Vliet matured, the guitarist initially interacted with the composer as a teenager during jam sessions and was previously acquainted as well with Magic Band members French and guitarist Jeff Cotton. He joined them soon after completing high school. 

Almost immediately, Harkleroad perceived something disconcerting about the environment, as his friends seemed simultaneously uncomfortable and excessively animated: “John and Jeff were not the same guys I used to know. They both had a seriously dire look in their eyes, yet on occasions would slip into a seriously over-the-top excitement” (23). The dissonant dimension of the experience diffused, however, in the face of the rewarding complexity of Van Vliet's compositions. He recalls, “That was really one of the best parts of being in the band. It legitimized art as opposed to that whole attitude of, ‘You're supposed to go to the post office and work and have three kids’” (26). Quickly, however, the admiration and animation Harkleroad experienced was transformed into disdain and disorientation. “The whole vibe consisted of us being enlightened by our overseer,” he remarks, once he recognized the degree to which he had become a “slavedog,”’ practicing sometimes sixteen or seventeen hours a day (38, 39). In addition, when the band was not practicing, they were subjected to belligerent indoctrination sessions led by Van Vliet that felt like little more than brainwashing. 

Their wills broken down by lack of sleep, little food and long bouts of strenuous performance, these young men not long out of high school were compelled by Van Vliet to think of one another as potential deviants from the cause, as their overseer divided his ensemble into initiates and apostates. With Don there was always a “culprit,” there always had to be a person for him to vent his “beef” of the moment onto. Don was always picking on whoever he deemed to be the “bad person” of that particular moment. This always rotated, all of us were in that position at one time or another.…As a result of picking on people, it was not at all uncommon for us to literally go around beating the shit out of each other! (Harkleroad Citation68) One time in private with John French, Don asked him what he thought of another band memeber, after John told him he didnt think he was very good, Dom later brought it up in front of the whole band what John had said behind his back. Divide and conquer at its finest. 

Harkleroad does not dwell upon these abuses, although he does characterize himself as a “beaten little puppy” who rationalizes his continuation in the ensemble because of the challenges of the repertoire and the skills to be learned as Van Vliet's musical amanuensis (85). He transcribed the separate shards that the bandleader created, assimilated them into coherent compositions and taught them by ear to his associates. After six years, however, Harkleroad could no longer tolerate this treatment and quit. He puts in perspective the length of his endurance with the conviction that Van Vliet was a truly great and abusive person in equal parts. As for worldly rewards, he received no money for his labors and admits to underplaying the depth of his degradation: “To this day I don't think I've ever really represented the situation as bad as it really was. I've just told parts of it” (130–31).

If Harkleroad minimizes his pain, John French maximizes the psychological and professional baggage incurred by placing himself in a subordinate position to a frequently belligerent taskmaster. What Harkleroad withholds, French unveils. Beefheart: Through the Eyes of Magic possesses a kind of Tolstoyan amplitude. A hefty 800 plus pages, it interweaves the drummer's exhaustive recollections along with information drawn from interviews with various members of the Magic Band as well as other associates and acquaintances from Van Vliet's past. The resemblance of French to the Russian novelist as an interrogator of behavior, however, does not stop at a simple matter of page length. He exhibits a comparable eagerness to comprehend convoluted human acts equal to that which impelled Tolstoy to inquire what drives societies to engage in battle or distinguishes one unhappy family from another. French concludes Van Vliet's erratic actions, their obscure motivations and the damage that arose in their wake to be as ultimately incomprehensible as the bulk of the public find the composer's repertoire. At the same time, the substantive difference between that audience and the drummer comes down to the simple fact that most people avoid repeated encounters with the Beefheart catalogue whereas French returns with a dogged persistence not only to perform with the composer but also to attempt to suss out what makes him tick. He has committed his lifetime both to that repertoire as well as to the dissection of the personality of its creator.

Beefheart: Through the Eyes of Magic opens with the explosive impact of a close-up in a Sam Fuller feature film, such as the object struck into the camera lens that begins The Naked Kiss (1964): John French is jammed into a wall by his bandmates as Van Vliet angrily interrogates him in the process of “another of his ridiculous witch hunts” (7). He continues, ''A day like this seemed to happen after about five normal days. In fact, most of the days like this lasted two days, occasionally even three. They were comprised of the sleepless horror of either being the target or watching the target and knowing you soon would be next. Huge amounts of tea were consumed to keep us awake and alert.'' (CitationFrench, Beefheart 7) 

The paradox at the core of this scenario that French will unpack with the skill of a therapist and the dedication of a fictional shamus comes down to how encounters such as these, whose goal “seemed to be to completely strip the individual in question of all dignity, self-worth and pride,” could coincide with an artistic agenda that would result in “a quest to finish an album that would later land the position of 33rd in the top albums ever recorded—at least according to Rolling Stone magazine” (8, 9). French concludes by assessing that, notwithstanding the harassment, the poverty, the physical wear and tear, “I knew it was a privilege—albeit certainly wrapped in an ironic cloak—to be associated with this man” (768). And yet, so varied and unpredictable could Van Vliet be that, out of the blue, he might act in a manner that puts the kibosh on any conclusive judgment of his character. In that regard, the last, altogether typically gnomic things that Van Vliet said to French hold considerable resonance: “You were always there, man,” repeated three times with his hand on his heart, and then the ultimate admonition, “I'll see you around. Watch your topknot, and keep your eyes on the skyline” (French, Beefheart 748, ”Watch Your Topknot” 35).

Exhaustive as French's detailing of his experience with Van Vliet may be, it is possible to subdivide the acrimony into categories. Otherwise, a reader can become as swamped by the evidence as French often feels overwhelmed by his emotions and memories. Two bodies of information particularly stand out: first, the refusal on the bandleader's part either to practice standardized musical language or to alleviate his ignorance in any manner. This led to his dependence upon French, and others including Harkleroad, to translate his ideas and transfer them to their confederates. If one were to put the matter in an automotive context, Van Vliet adamantly demanded to occupy the driver's seat but steadfastly refused to earn a license. Second, there was the manner in which Van Vliet maltreated his accompanists psychologically and eventually physically in a seemingly systematic effort to evacuate them of any sense of self-worth, even of personality. Part of the rationale for both the length of the book and the scope of the evidence is to permit French not only to validate his reading of Van Vliet but also to reinforce its accuracy by means of the corroboration offered to him by others who were treated in the same manner and suffered the same indignity. 

He states, “Don's strongest talent may lay not in his musical abilities as most would think, but in his theatrical abilities, which he had developed at an early age….Van Vliet's theatrical abilities were able to convince others that he was a genuine blues singer, when, in fact, he was merely playing a composite role of the heroes of his adolescence.…Don was often lost in his own songs” (Beefheart 125). Putting the time into practicing or endeavouring to learn his own material with sufficient precision such that he could repeat it from one occasion to another—an ability he routinely demanded of his accompanists—apparently failed to stimulate Van Vliet's imagination. Part of the impetus behind his ill treatment of his accompanists consequently arose from his deliberate lack of a common language that he could share with them. Whenever he could not translate his ideas into a communal form, Van Vliet would turn upon the others and attack their very professional competence rather than recognize the liability of his own failure to acquire certain elementary musical skills. His commitment to his music remained, start to finish, resolutely self-referential; adamantly committed to the assumption that other performers were vehicles for his work, not individuals to be valued for themselves.

This posture can perhaps be most accurately illustrated by Van Vliet's habit of explaining how he wanted his accompanists to perform in a manner that refused to be anything other than metaphorical. Biographer Mike Barnes sympathetically explains the process as follows: “Van Vliet was becoming more interested in using found sounds to generate musical ideas and his descriptions of what he wanted were beginning to sound like a verbalized equivalent of a section of graphic score” (303). For example, the drummer Cliff Martinez reports receiving the following sets of instructions from Van Vliet: “Make it like Fred Astaire dangling through a tea cup; like BBs on the plate; babies flying over the mountains” (Barnes 303). 

Even if the composer believed his intention was to disrupt the conventional patterns of communication, French and others speculate whether, in fact, the practice was yet another means of controlling the situation without having to step outside a rigidly defined comfort zone. John French's description of what it was like to be Van Vliet's musical amanuensis reinforces this tactic of simultaneously controlling others while abnegating the role of authority: “Putting together Don's music was like taking a dozen jigsaw puzzles and dumping them into the same box, then dividing the scrambled parts and putting several puzzles together at once. Everything was incomplete and disorganized. It made the whole effort seem intensely overwhelming” (292). It would be a mistake to assume that Van Vliet routinely acted in such a passive manner, for he repeatedly exercised his authority with considerable vigor at least and overt violence at worst. French and Harkleroad each report on how he often deliberately adopted the role of despot. Even when an ostensible rationale for his behavior could not be discerned, Van Vliet did not seem to require a distinct impetus in order to launch into aggression. French nonetheless uncovers a method, or perhaps a formula, to his belligerence. ''It was a bit of Pavlov, mixed with Synanon, interrogation procedures, sleep deprivation, and brainwashing techniques all rolled up in a bundle. It was actually brilliant work on Don's part. I think his most brilliant work ever—his total control and manipulation of four young men. This was group encounter in which negative reinforcement techniques transformed us into obedient minions.'' (French, Beefheart 375)

Sometimes these techniques led to a one-on-one attack upon a particular musician, usually in the form of character assassination. The most indistinguishable factors set off Van Vliet. So indelible was the impact of his behavior that, years later, members of the Magic Band could still flinch at simply hearing a phrase that he would use to dismiss them. Harkleroad writes:

Recently I got together with Citation John French, he was here visiting and my wife and I took him out to dinner, and he said a phrase I hadn't heard for years, it almost made me quiver. He said “You have a thing”. And when you “had a thing” you were the culprit. The dirty thing you had done, whatever it was, was undermining the brilliance of our situation. So we all “had things”, of course. Except one person—and you can guess who that was (43). 

On other occasions, as in the episode that opens French's narrative, Van Vliet enlisted the rest of the Magic Band as accomplices and dealt out physical punishment to the individual who had been labeled an apostate. In the body of his memoir, French provides an even more detailed and disturbing description of the attack upon him. ''Don shouted, “Get him!” On that verbal cue, all four of them started hitting me at once, mostly in the face. I can only recall this kind of physical attack happening to me and only this once, but it was absolutely terrifying.…I had been scared, but this time I actually thought I was going to die, and this was more real than anything before. I remember being cornered in the kitchen and hand after hand hitting and slapping me on the face and upper body and being kicked.…This was the most frightened I had ever been and I shouted “stop” several times.'' (French, Beefheart 451)

What proved to be equally if not even more disconcerting to French than the physical pain inflicted upon him was how Van Vliet switched positions almost immediately. The very next evening, he was appointed “Don's ‘special friend’ again,” urged not to leave, and informed he was crucial to the maintenance of the Magic Band (455). Nothing about Van Vliet's behavior on this latter occasion came across as premeditated or purposefully sanctimonious. To French, “This was a very emotional and heartfelt moment, and I almost never saw Don appear this sincere in my whole experience with him” (455). At the same time, the variability of Van Vliet's behavior does not contradict his primary aim of being in control at all times. French hypothesizes how the fact that he was an only child instilled in Van Vliet an innate and inflexible sense of superiority. Van Vliet reinforced this supposition when he forthrightly informed the drummer, “You realize, John, that I am a King.…John, you know I am” (507). Van Vliet was also not above being simply and purely petty and vindictive. For all that French did to actualize the very material contained on Trout Mask Replica, he was denied any credit on the jacket sleeve of the album. Admittedly, his image appears among the other oddly dressed individuals in the incorporated photos, yet the list of performers would lead one to assume that the drumming was performed by a phantom.

When the master does not allow his or her individuality and distinctiveness to swallow up this environment, the passing along of tacit knowledge can dominate, facilitating growth on the part of his or her subordinates, and a supportive community comes into existence.

Sociologist Richard Sennett presents a vision of how a workshop can most demonstrably permit this kind of growth in his book The Craftsman. He writes, ''In theory the well-run workshop should balance tacit and explicit knowledge. Masters should be pestered to explain themselves, to dredge out the assemblage of clues and moves they have absorbed into silence within—if only they could, or if only they would. Much of their very authority derives from seeing what others don't see, knowing what they don't know; their authority is made manifest in their silence.'' (Sennett 78)

Sennett believes that one of the primary acts that indicate how much masters are willing to subordinate their authority to the needs of the workshop is how they explain their skills, how they transmit their expertise. Even though an apprentice learns a great deal by osmosis, whenever the master demonstrates some skill, a burden exists on the part of the apprentice to be sure that they figure out, as Sennett states, “what turned the key in the lock,” so to speak (181). A genuine and potentially transformational transposition of knowledge is encouraged whenever the master recognizes the vulnerability of the apprentice, and “[t]his turn to vulnerability is the sign of sympathy the instructor gives” (186). He adds, “the expert guides by anticipating difficulties for the novice; sympathy and prehension combine” (186). Whenever masters, however, fail to consider beforehand how their skills come into being, that partial, and ultimately incomprehensible, explanation is defined by Sennett as “dead denotation” (183). This form of instruction becomes vivid only to someone who has accomplished the task beforehand. Over-familiarity on the part of the master can only increase the degree of dead denotation. Therefore, Sennett asserts, “The challenge posed by dead denotation is precisely to take apart tacit knowledge, which requires bringing to the surface of consciousness that knowledge which has become so self-evident and habitual that it seems just natural” (183). Appraising the degree to which this transmission succeeds necessitates a moral judgment upon the masters, as their willingness or failure to interpolate in their instructions the degree of vulnerability possessed by a novice indicates their capacity for extinguishing solipsism and inaugurating sympathy. Even if neither Harkleroad nor French appears to be aware of Sennett's study, their memoirs together reinforce how Van Vliet chose to embody the role of master in a particularly truncated and ultimately inefficient fashion. His level of sympathy appears to have been attenuated, and his willingness to take apart and render into public discourse his inner thoughts and forms of expression virtually negligible. Consequently, he may well have been frustrated to the extreme by finding himself in this position, and his objectifications of the Magic Band resulted to some degree from his sense that they as a group occupied a separate and lamentably incompatible universe. Van Vliet in the end abnegated his very exercise of authority as a master by failing to attempt to comprehend what these young men, just barely out of high school and only embarked upon manhood, knew and did not know. He chose by and large to manifest his authority through either silence, illustrated by his lack of practice time spent with his accompanists, or a form of expression so driven by private references as to be virtually inexplicable. Of course, as even Sennett admits, a workshop does not guarantee the acquisition of knowledge; sometimes it does not ever transmit the skills required for a particular activity. Nonetheless, how that process occurs is rich with ethical implications.

Perhaps, in the end, the assumption that Van Vliet could or even wished to exceed the least common requirements of the role of master flies in the face of the core of his personality. Clearly, neither Harkleroad nor French felt, despite considerable interaction with him personally and professionally, that they ever cracked the code of the core of his being. An insurmountable barrier of personal inhibitions and prohibitions intervened. Maybe they would have been forewarned more explicitly as to that obstacle had they read certain of Van Vliet's lyrics as an index of his character. As stated earlier, one of the core paradoxes of his accomplishments remains how a body of work that challenges fixation and celebrates open-mindedness should have incorporated such a profound degree of rigidity in order to come into existence. One cannot therefore soft-pedal the encomiums in his words to the vitality of physical nature or appreciate his employment of a broad range of the possible forms of the imagination without keeping in mind the occasions when his musicians were made to feel less than human. 

One way potentially to make sense of this conundrum is to recognize that there are those kinds of individuals who can bring more oxygen into a room than already exists in a space, allow those they share that territory with to breathe more fully and experience a beneficial giddiness. And there are others who suck much of the oxygen out of a given environment and leave their cohorts gasping for breath and disagreeably light-headed. Don Van Vliet seems to be both of those kinds of individuals, as he could inspire and incapacitate his associates at one and the same time.

So you would get the band living communally and being subjected by Beefheart to extreme social isolation, starvation and that most delightful of brainwashing techniques, scapegoating. This happens in many places - the leader (Beefheart in this case) picks out a group member (could be Jimmy Semens one week, Rockette Morton the next, John French the week after that) and blames him for screwing up some song or another, or generally bringing everyone down with his miserable vibe, or eating too much bread, or anything. Beefheart would then subject the individual to hours of verbal abuse, cranking up the menace and browbeating everyone else to join in, until the scapegoat was taking insults escalating to physical violence from all the others. Ribs were broken at times, fists were used. 

After a while it’s clear that the cultish atmosphere includes many features of what we now recognise as Grooming and Psychological Manipulation. Group members were cut off from friends and family. The Captain controls everything to do with money, living conditions, drugs and food as well as the music. As someone says very perceptively towards the end of the book: “Don van Vliet was fortunate to have lived in an era where his psychopathic behaviour could be misconstrued as genius” At least Manson had an income though, the austerity in Vliet’s HQ was verging on some sort of Soviet reverse opulence. The entire commune had zero income other than welfare for the duration of their stay and powered through 14-hour practice sessions every day fuelled by no more than a cup of soybeans that had usually been stolen on scavenger hunts. With extreme punishments for stepping out of line, the process moved forward tentatively. As Drumbo puts it, “It was as though someone had taken a blank jigsaw puzzle, randomly picked up pieces and scribbled little pictures on each one, and said, ‘Put this together, I’ll be out later to see the thing when it’s done’.”

Even when Vliet entered the studio for more professional phases, he recorded the overdubbed vocals by hearing the original songs through a slightly ajar window. Owing to the fact that he could barely hear the melody the vocals remain complete unsynchronised. When this was pointed out to him, he presumably left the studio like The Fonz twirling his keys on his fingers as he quipped, “[Synchronising?] That’s what they do before a commando raid, isn’t it?” The result is an album that remains beyond review. The mayhem bleeds through, but depending on who you ask, a few moments of magic can be found in the melee. All that is left to say, is that there is certainly nothing so strange as folk. 

The same can be said when the pieces were finally ready to be put together. One of the initial recordings involved Zappa coming to the house with engineer Dick Kunc and setting up the recording equipment in the centre of the house then achieving sound separation by having each musician play behind a closed door in a different room of the house. It’s this question that becomes a recurrent theme – how a scene that was initially based on the potentially liberating forces of psychedelics soon produced a kind of dystopia where it became “uncool” at the very least to challenge obnoxious behaviour. Drumbo gives numerous examples of how the group were intimidated by the Captain, and afraid to be the one to stand out. Equally, the media didn’t want to look uncool by not “getting it”. There’s a particularly fawning 1971 Rolling Stone interview where nonsense like “there are only forty people in the world, and five of them are hamburgers” go unchallenged.











Friday 22 March 2024

Cult filmmaker Fabrizio Federico picks his Top 'Coming Of Age' Movies


  • Rivers edge (1986)
  • Desperate for love (1989)
  • Over the Edge (1979)
  • The Death of Richie (1977)
  • Twisted (1986)
  • The Boys Next Door (1985)
  • Heathers (1988)
  • Paolo Alto (2013)
  • The Legend Of Billie Jean (1985)
  • The Wonderers (1979)
  • Mean Girls (2004)
  • Rushmore (1998)
  • Bully (2001)
  • Shoplifters Of The World (2021)
  • Julien Donkey Boy (1999)
  • The Virgin Suicides (1999)
  • White Oleander (2002)
  • Jimmy & Judy (2006)
  • Quadrophenia (1979)
  • Boyz In The Hood (1991)
  • Ricky 6 (2000)
  • Menace To Society (1993)
  • Another Day In Paradise (1998)
  • Terror In The Family (1996)
  • Fear (1996)
  • Basketball Diaries (1995)
  • Out Of The Blue (1980)
  • My Own Private Idaho (1991)
  • Mala Noche (1985)
  • Child Of Rage (1992)
  • American Heart (1992)
  • Christine F (1981)
  • Chains Of Gold (1991)
  • Castle In The Ground (2019)
  • Zero Day (2003)
  • Elephant (2003)
  • We Need ToTalk About Kevin (2011)
  • Archie's Final Project (2009)
  • Dear Mr Gacy (2010)
  • The Last American Virgin (1982)
  • Flowers In The Attic (1987)
  • Theorem (1968)
  • Twisted Nerve (1968)
  • La Luna (1979)
  • The Devil Probably (1977)
  • Pixote (1980)
  • Poison For The Fairies (1986)
  • Murder By Numbers (2002)
  • The Crush (1993)
  • An American Crime (2007)
  • L.I.E (2001)
  • Hurricane Streets (1997)
  • The Ice Storm (1997)
  • Welcome To The Doll House (1995)
  • Ghost World (2001)
  • Mikey (1992)
  • Teenage Bonnie & Klepto Clyde (1993)
  • Snowtown (2011)
  • Afterschool (2008)
  • Adventureland (2009)
  • Roger Dodger (2002)
  • Igby Goes Down (2002)

Sunday 18 February 2024

How to Hypnotize


Hypnosis is the misdirection of attention and focus ''think of ur toe''

Say IMAGINE, PICTURE, FOCUS, BELIEVE, FEEL, EMBRACE, ACCEPT

Focus on image
Say whats gonna happen
Mention the experience
Turn their focus to what ur saying (do u feel a sensation in ur feet etc...) shift their consciousness

Emotional persuasion u need to bypass the conscious mind:
*Who's gonna be the 1st person to notice you've stopped smoking
*since ur going to the store go to the bank for me
*our country is in trouble, everythings a mess, we are in a mess, thats why i need to be president'!
(Truth,truth,truth, command)

Manson
Do u love ur world?
Would u give ur life for ur world?

The mind takes the facts, it runs them through feelings and comes up with judgements

He hasnt been 100% honest with u, he hasnt been happy

Psychometry - token-object reading, or psychoscopy, is a form of extrasensory perception characterized by the claimed ability to make relevant associations from an object of unknown history by making physical contact with that object

What is the nature of the human condition?
People have the desire to think they r better than others, they look for reasons to appear superior
How often do u stop and ask if ur justified to think that ur smarter than someone else?
Construct the situation - trigger the bahaviour - watch them step into ur trap

In what situation would their characteristics benefit my goals
Outspokeness, low self esteem, naive, trusting, contrarian, emphatic quality

Speak in a low, slow, soothing, voice. Take your time when talking, keeping your voice calm and collected. Draw out your sentences a little longer than usual. Imagine you are trying to calm down a frightened or worrying person, letting your voice be an example. Keep this tone of voice throughout the entire interaction. Some good words to start with include:

• "Let my words wash over you, and take the suggestions as you desire them."

• "Everything here is safe, calm, and peaceful. Let yourself sink into the couch/chair as your relax deeply."

• "Your eyes may feel heavy and want to close. Let your body sink naturally down as your muscles relax. Listen to your body and my voice as you begin to feel calm."

• "You are in complete control of this time. You will only accept those suggestions which are for your benefit and that you are willing to accept."

Suggestions
• "You can feel your eyelids getting heavy. Let them drift and fall."

• "You are letting yourself slip deeper and deeper into a calm, peaceful trance.

• "You can feel yourself relaxing now. You can feel a heavy, relaxed feeling coming over you. And as I continue to talk, that heavy relaxed feeling will get stronger and stronger, until it carries you into a deep, peaceful state of relaxation."

• "Every word that I utter is putting you faster and deeper, and faster and deeper, into a calm, peaceful state of relaxation."

• "Sinking down, and shutting down. Sinking down, and shutting down. Sinking down, and shutting down, shutting down completely."

• "And the deeper you go, the deeper you are able to go. And the deeper you go, the deeper you want to go, and the more enjoyable the experience becomes."

Here’s a closer look at his bag of techniques for rigging the game – his gimmickry:

1. Phatic Communication - What were we thinking? Why weren’t we paying attention? Now then, now then”, “How’s about that then”, “Now then, Now then” “Gather round” “Guys and gals” ''Jinggle janggle''

2. Rhythm: Power, Effect & the Paradiddles

3. Terror-Eyes to Terrorise - make the whites of ur eyes show by bulging ur eyes

4. Legerdemain: The art of misdirection - In addition to manual dexterity, sleight of hand depends on the use of psychology, timing, misdirection, and natural choreography in accomplishing a magical effect. Misdirection is perhaps the most important component of the art of sleight of hand. The magician choreographs his actions so that all spectators are likely to look where he or she wants them to. More importantly, they do not look where the performer does not wish them to look. Two types of misdirection are timing and movement. A phrase often used is “A larger action covers a smaller action.” Care must be taken however to not make the larger action so big that it becomes suspect.”

There has been a whole school of argument that hypnosis is nothing more than an exaggerated form of social compliance. This is evidence that they are not just telling you what they think you want to hear. They are actually perceiving things differently. That is a very important lesson."

Derren Brown
*You'll notice that your eyes start to get heavy as u listen to me
*You can wonder how deeply you are going into a trance
*As u sit there i want you to notice that ur body is growing heavier
*feel me enhancing the trance
*As u sit there reading these words try not to scratch
*As u sit there, and as u, despite ur enviroment, really focus on these words, and as u carry in reading this page, and the more u try not to think about it, the more u'll notice the feeling of wanting to scratch

*DESCRIBE WHAT THEY ARE DOING FIRST, WHAT YOU ARE OBSERVING THEM DOING: as u sit there, reading these words, trying not to scratch ur arm etc....
Pacing & leading: As you X, so you Y
The 1st piece of behaviour is true & then you mention the desired outcome
''As you sleep, you will dream about me''

*Here's 3 pacing statements and 1 leading statement
''Feel the temperature in the room, listen to my voice, as ur aware of chair ur sitting in - u can begin to relax"
Or
''Thinking back on all ur past problems u might find a solution today''

Vague Language such as:
NOMINALIZATION
A noun with no phisical form:
Problem, depression, understanding, enpowerment, excitment, love, connection, skill
UNSPECIFIED VERB
Travel, move, relocate, transform,
NEGATION LANGUAGE (creates confusion)
I dont know, it doesnt matter, i5s not important, dont focus, i dont know if u can,
NEGATE & COMMAND
''I dont know if u can LISTEN intensely'
''It's not important to FOCUS ur attention''

As you sit there listening to my words, with your eyes closed, feeling your hands on the chair, allowing my words to relax you as your breathing becomes regular and peaceful. Id like you to let ur self begin to drift away into a kind of sleep

As you listen to my voice and look up at my watch, watching it as u relax in the chair, you'll notice that your eyes start to grow heavy as u listen to me. Thats right - and as u notice them blinking, so too you can keep listening to me as you relax and as you allow them to grow heavier. As the rest of you relaxes in the chair so your eyes get heavier and you blink more and more and just allow them to close so that you can drift off into a sleep

USE IMAGERY
If u are talking about a garden let them hear, feel, smell, see and taste the surroundings.
Hear the birds sing in the trees, feel the grass under their feet, smell of the flowers. Make it a multi-sensory experience, they can feel the sun in their face.

HYPNOSIS STRUCTURE
*prepare subject for the trance by using suggestions and eye closure, utilize the subjects expectations and beliefs. Have them breath normally then tense their muscles, hold it and then relax their muscles. Tell them they are sinking into their chair as their body grows heavier with relaxation.
''And as ur body grows heavier and your breathing becomes relaxed and regular, so too you can listen to me as you sink down in the chair and let ur self drift off comfortably.''
Or have them look at a swinging watch and tell them their eyes are growing heavier
*deepen the trance by using a metaphor such as walking down some stairs. Tell them each step down will relax them more amd more, we r going to delve into ur subcontious and they r in a safe place
''you r now going deeper into ur trance, u will hear and understand everything I say. U will be aware of your self going into a trance. I will count from 1 to 10 as you walk down the stairs. Once i reach 10 you will be at the bottom of the stairs and in a profound state of relaxation. AS i count, AS u take each step, AS you breath, AS you listen to me, SO each step, each number, each word will take you deeper. U can return to the staircase anytime u want to.''
*carry out hypnotic work. Tell them they will see 5 coloured doors, what colours do they see, pick a door and enter.''
Or u can simply describe what they see behind the door 'a garden' and describe the experience to them. Tell them they can always return to the garden as a safe place. Suggest to them that there is a chair in the garden in the perfect spot and to sit in it. Say that their right arm is heavy as it rests on the arm chair. You try and lift your arm but you cant because u r so relaxed. ''Try to unstick ur arm from the chair''. If they cant unstick their arm from the chair but tries to that means they are the best subject for suggestability and is responsive. If they do lift their arm treat it like a success ''Excellent, and as u notice how heavy ur arm is you gently rest it and let it take you down now even deeper into a state of total relaxation. Let go of all ur tensions and fears and relax even more.''
No tell them their other arm is getting lighter like a helium balloon and all the tension vanishes from their arm. You can even make them float away in the sky. Pace the feeling of the hand coming away from the chair, pace, lead and suggest the arm rising up to the sky. Then have the arm gently lower and as it touches the arm chair it sinks them even deeper into a trance. ''See you hand come up to ur face as u sit in the garden, feel ur hand touch ur face. Once it does you will drift off into an even more profound and comfortable trance, u will feel dreamy and maybe start to levitate. Tell them that in the future they can return to this special place by going down the staircase and entering the door to the garden in order to relax, lie in the grass and re-experience these wonderful sensations and feelings. Use this regularly so it locks into ur mind otherwise it will be difficult to bring back.
*awaken the subject. Have them leave the garden and walk back up the stair case slowly counting from 10 to 0 as the reach the top of the stairs. As they reach zero openur eyes and feel the drowsiness slip away.
*make sure the subject is free of any suggestion and no longer hypnotically responsive

Cold reading
Feelings, deep down, on the inside
Often, rarely, occasionally
Never use: never & always
Create an out: ''Sometimes you hide things & occasionally u reveal too much''

*Bring ur mind to the present
*Look them in the eye (if their eyes r darting it means they want to escape from the conversation or topic) - if they look straight at u they r interested in ur thoughts
*if they eyebrows go down while they look away they might be thinking hard or worried about something else
*if the eyebrows go up and eyes go big then they r curious about what u say
*if pupils go big they like u, excited and happy

The unknown side of the human psyche

''The more u REMEMBER the RELAXATION within, the more u notice the COMFORT through your arms and people really begin to RELAX deeply and more comfortably when they start to LET GO and REST'


I like ur style
I appretiate you
When can i see u again?
Great sense of humour/brains/personality
I got this babe/ i'll take care of it
YOU got this baby
You look extra beautiful
Good memory
Fill u with more children
Ur the perfect mix of cute and sexy

Your my hearts breath****
Sensational
Enchanting
Ur a precious package
I like ur perspective
Marvalous

Luminous, exotic, lovely, erotic, radiant

The plot of female hero myth is she tames a mysterious & agressive male (vampire,wolf, surgeon, millionaire,pirate)
Women want to tame but then lose interest in u once tamed

I can see ur soul

EMBEDDED COMMANDS & SUGGESTIONS
*remember when....imagine how.....in the future.....picture....recall.....feel...allow...
visualise
*allow your self to feel
*do u feel ready
*allow it to happen
*allow ur self to take action tonight
Its happening in ur mind....
Thats occuring when u imagine....
Its taking place
Its on
Make me feel welcome
Bliss
Accepting of me
U make me feel comfortable
I could feel their innocence
I understand ur passions

TURN ON TOPICS
*transcendence, awe, mystery, identity, edge, novelty, surprise, being dominated, partner in crime, secrets, secret location, love, people watching
Tension, indulgence, gravitating to people, magnetic qualities, adventure, rituals & courtships, emotional roller coaster
Passion, intrigue, control
Teacher, vivid imagination, receive, master, learn, fascination, tender, challenges, her process,

*Which quality would you pick to have in ur life to make it all worthwhile?
*what does that allow u to do in life?
*how does that make you feel inside?
* what would be a perfect scenario for you to feel happy?
*what emotion do you feel inside?
*what will bring you closer to that feeling?
*what do you like doing?

Do you have the time?
Can i ask u a question wheres the best pub around here to go drinking cose im not from around here?
R u single by any chance?
Can i have ur number?

I'll think about it
I ll tell u later

Ur my fav person to talk to / to spend time with
I could talk to u all night long
Ive learned so much from talking with u
U look amazing as always
Thats a good joke ur pretty funny
Ur not like anyone ive ever met before
Ur really good at what u do
I feel like im so much better when im with u
U have such incredible hair/ lips/eyes
I admire ur work ethic
What do u think?

You've been activated
That must have been so traumatic for you
You're special














Wednesday 10 January 2024

Paranoid Alice: Songs about Cults, Serial Killers & Mind Control

 

The 'punge rock' band Paranoid Alice have been causing waves with their tsunami like live shows across the country and even ripping up a picture of Putin on a music tv show over the past year. Their debut album Mental Illness For The Masses is a combination of grunge, punk, doo-wop and noise psych, during the recording they did a seance and fired two bass players before they took the songs on the road.

At the moment their lyrics have been the subject of much mystery, mainly because over the years most of the best rock albums have checked a lot of the same esoteric boxes this band is fascinated by. Paranoid Alice mix everything from true crime stories such as the Jonestown Massacre, Caroline Calloway, Charles Manson, Jessica Wongso. Horror and psychological movies are examined such as 'The Shinning', 'Black Widow' and 'The Joker' not to mention society and woke culture on their song Buttons.

Paranoid Alice are a weird mixture of being an articulate band who have obviously read up on psychology and crowd control, but once they plug in they capture a dangerous quality that all the best bands possess on record and onstage. They are unpredictable and enjoy provoking audiences when other bands arent these days. Over the year they have been compared to The Jesus & Mary Chain, Oasis, The Doors, New York Dolls, Sex Pistols, Throbbing Gristle, Joy Division, Nirvana and The Velvet Underground.

The guitar smashing went viral after many older people complained about the destruction which captivated social media thus creating a new generation gap in rock music, with those understanding the frustration of todays society that is then dissipated when smashing a guitar onstage, it is also the purest form of rebel yell that can be made in rock music. The band joked about the attention but it hasnt stopped the band from their ideals. Another angle that has cropped up is the use of mysticism and shamanic imagery they have used on posters and bootlegs, including artwork from the Salem witch trials, voodoo ceremonies and occult secret societies. The overt cruelty and menace of the music — the droning and distortion behind lyrics about addiction, sadism and cultural exploitation doesn't come from nowhere. Paranoid Alice will show you where that perpetual novelty of the dark side comes from, and allowes you to connect the sonic dots with other, contemporaneous artistic eruptions. 





Sunday 19 November 2023

The Genius of Exploitation Film Marketing

 

From 1919-1959 exploitation films ruled underground & sometimes even mainstream theatres. Many exploitation classics were created, and the marketing genius behind these films was outrageous but should be celebrated. 

The marketing and storytelling practices revolved around a strict code:

  1. The movies were limited to adult-only showings.
  2. Performances used to be segregated by gender.
  3. Age restrictions.
  4. Lectures & clinical nurses would be in attendance.
The films plot & storyline would revolve around:
  1. The Innocent: Young man or woman who either gets addicted to drugs, booze, sexual disease, pregnancy, gambling, cigarettes, abortion. Sets up the story to prove that the innocent lacks and needs an education in such a subject.
  2. The Corruptor: The person who leads the young innocent astray and down a path of destruction. Pimps, homesexuals, theatrical agent, drug pusher, seducer, prostitute. They will entice the innocent to ''try'' something.
  3. The Parents: They are represented as either being good because they educated their children about vice, or bad because they were selfish & too ignorant to teach their kids about the corruptors.
  4. The Crusader: Usually is a teacher, cop, physician, public health officer or reporter who comes to the rescue. They are usually having to fight petty moral codes & the status quo of closed minded society. They are the underdog and they address both the characters and the audience.
  5. The Charlatan: The physician, snake oil salesman, back alley abortionist, televangelist or any other quack motivated by greed. The crusader works to expose the charlatans evils.
Education is at the center of these early trash exploitation films, the need to protect the youth from nudists,high-flying hop heads, strippers, vice lords, mafia, bad high school girls.

Most of these movie campaign adverts covered the major appeals and bases that drew people to them such as sex & vice:

  1. The aftereffects of heterosexual bonding, ''I was an innocent virgin, now a victim of desire.''
  2. Blatant sex & nudity. Images and referencea to sex & catch lines, ''See the queens of burlesque in their sensational strip tease dances.''
  3. The unusual, aberrant, or forbidden, ''Sex maniacs, murderers, hookers, victims of passion.''
  4. Timelines or expose, ''Scoop! The picture that dares expose the naked & shameless truth about the scarlet street of sin. Timely as todays headlines.''
  5. Veracity, ''See & know the truth.''
  6. Pedagogic appeal, ''This could be your daughter, why shohld she suffer for your ignorance, dont let it happen.''

Film producers like Kroger Babb, Dwain Esper, William Castle, George Hilriman, Raymond L. Friedgen, Edward L. Alperson, Edgar G. Ulmer, George McCall,
James M. Doane, J. G. Sanford, David F. Friedman, Samuel Z. Arkoffs and Joseph E. Levines, Bob Shaye used all the tricks & tactics in the book to get people into the cinemas. 
"ONCE IN A LIFETIME Comes A Presentation That TRULY PULLS NO PUNCHES! Now YOU Can SEE The Motion Picture That DARES DISCUSS and EXPLAIN SEX AS NEVER BEFORE SEEN and HEARD! THE ONE, THE ONLY, THE ORIGINAL...MOM AND DAD...Truly The World’s Most Amazing Attraction! NO ONE UNDER HIGH SCHOOL AGE Admitted Unless Accompanied By Parents!! EVERYTHING SHOWN! EVERYTHING EXPLAINED!"

If you lived in a small town in the 1940s or ’50s, it was virtually impossible not to know about a film called Mom and Dad. Sooner or later a flamboyant publicity man would drive into town, the ads would appear, and the tempestuous debate would begin. Plastered on every available storefront, barn, bus bench, and shoeshine stand was a poster seducing you with an attractive couple in mid-kiss and black bold-faced ballyhoo exploding all around them. And in a black box in the lower left-hand corner:

"Extra! IN PERSON: ELLIOT FORBES, ‘THE SECRETS OF SENSIBLE SEX.’"

Alarmed letters to the editor would appear in the newspaper. Clergymen would express opinions from the pulpit. If you were Catholic, you’d be banned from attending. In some towns the police would send men to check the film for violations of the obscenity statutes. And as soon as the first women-only matinee was screened, at 2 p.m. on a Friday afternoon, the town would blaze with Mom and Dad gossip. Though all but forgotten today, Mom and Dad was so heavily promoted that Time once remarked that the ad campaign "left only the livestock unaware of the chance to learn the facts of life."

Kroger Babb, who billed himself as "America’s Fearless Young Showman," ruled over a vast army of Mom and Dad "roadshow units" from his headquarters in Worthington, Ohio. He used a form of exhibition that has all but disappeared today, called "fourwalling." Instead of booking his film into theaters for a percentage of the box office, he would simply rent the theater outright and take it over for the week or, in smaller markets, just one or two days. He would pay for all advertising and promotion, put his own banners and marquees out front, and turn the theater into a midway attraction, complete with lobby curiosities designed to lure customers. But because he was a pariah in Hollywood, he had to use independent mom-and-pop theaters that weren’t part of the big chains like Paramount and RKO, and he had to fight censorship boards, police forces, judges, clergy, and outraged newspaper editors everywhere he went. The film was in 400 separate court proceedings during its run.

The Blowoff

Babb was an expert at creating a kind of mob psychosis that peaked at the moment the projector started to roll. Watching the film today, it’s all but impossible to recreate the atmosphere of a capacity audience waiting breathlessly to see things they knew were forbidden and probably shocking. It was Babb’s peculiar genius that he was able to evoke the emotions of a horror movie using what is actually one of the blandest, most formulaic stories ever concocted. 

At this point the film would stop entirely and the house lights would come up. Elliot Forbes, an "eminent sexual hygiene commentator," would stride onto the stage and deliver a 20-minute lecture on the need for openness in sex education, the morality of the times, the biology of the body, and what the community can do to avoid the ruination of its youth.

If anyone checked the credentials of Elliot Forbes, he would have discovered that the speaker was the busiest man in the history of the lecture circuit, appearing 78 times a day in cities scattered from Maine to Oregon. There were actually 26 Elliot Forbeses, one for each roadshow, and Babb hired most of them from the ranks of retired or underemployed vaudeville comedians. They knew how to work crowds with a combination of earnestness, humor, and downhome "just folks" patter that would always crescendo at the moment when they held up two paperback books -- one called Man and Boy, the other called Woman and Girl -- and made a spiel for "a set of these vitally important books to be read in the privacy of your own home." Two women in nurse uniforms -- supposedly stationed in the theater to take care of people who fainted or had heart attacks -- would then pass among the crowd collecting money and distributing the volumes.

The books themselves were rehashes of venereal disease and pregnancy information that could be obtained at any public health agency. The Elliot Forbes speech was what is known in the carnival world as a "blowoff," long used in 10-in-one freak shows to hustle additional money from people who had already paid an admission price. In any good blowoff, there’s the constant implication that the "good stuff" is in the attraction you haven’t paid for yet -- in this case, the book. Forbes’ main job was to sell the books, which frequently augmented the box-office take by as much as 50 percent. In 1957, for example, at a four-week showing of Mom and Dad in Baltimore, the box-office gross was $82,000, but 45,000 copies of the books were sold, resulting -- 


By the time Kroger Babb came along, the formula for a sex hygiene movie was so well established that all he did was incorporate every element of every sex hygiene movie in history into a single film. But in search of even better profits, he changed the rules slightly. Many of the old sex-hygiene films had played in grindhouses or marginal theaters or even bars and restaurants. He wanted to break through to the biggest theaters in the country.

Howard W. Babb had gotten the nickname "Kroger" from the name of the grocery store where he worked as a boy growing up in Lees Creek, Ohio. Born in 1906, he was a sportswriter, a newspaper reporter, an ad manager, and, by his late 20s, publicity manager for the Chakeres-Warners theater chain, where he distinguished himself with publicity stunts such as having a man buried alive in front of a theater. He got the exploitation roadshow bug when he hooked up with an outfit called Cox and Underwood, which was peddling an aging sex hygiene film called Dust to Dust that was actually a 1935 film called High School Girl with a live-birth reel slapped onto the end. Proving that he was born to be in the business, it’s the same plot Babb would use in Mom and Dad. (The Forty Thieves frequently quarreled over territories, but they never sued for copyright infringement. Of course, many of them were carnival men, who regarded all cons as ancient and passed down from generation to generation, but they may also have simply sold stories the same way they occasionally sold sideshow acts.)

Anxious to go out on his own, Babb got 20 investors to put up the money to make Mom and Dad. The script was written by Mildred Horn, who would later become his wife, and who would also write Man and Woman and Boy and Girl. To direct he hired William "One Shot" Beaudine (so named because he never did a second take), who dated back to the Bowery Boys serials and had made over 200 B movies. He made the whole film in six days in 1944.

Perhaps the most revolutionary thing Babb did was to give his film such a bland and praiseworthy title. Who could object to a movie called Mom and Dad? This wasn’t a movie about crazed sex maniacs or loose women or pregnant girls or the vice rackets. It was a movie about the education of all the moms and dads in the world, and, in fact, he wanted every mom and every dad to see it. His principal weapon, when he came under attack, was the very ordinariness of his story.

End of the Hygiene Era

Babb was not just prepared for the inevitable censorship battles he would face. He egged them on. He stirred up the Catholics at every opportunity, capitalizing on the church’s "C" rating (for "condemned") of his film. He wrote fake letters to the editor in advance of the film’s arrival in town, hoping there would be controversy. His most successful letter was supposedly written by the anonymous mayor of a small town. The "mayor" explained that he had opposed the showing of Mom and Dad in his town, too, but then the 17-year-old daughter of a local churchgoing couple found herself "in trouble." He saw Mom and Dad with a friend, and as a result had the courage to tell her parents about her predicament. They were shocked, but forgave her. The girl gave birth to a healthy boy, which was adopted by a childless couple. The girl then completed high school and is now engaged to a fine young man. The mayor goes on to thank Babb for having the courage "to tell young people what their parents didn’t." And the letter ends: "P.S. That girl was my daughter."

Babb’s company, Hygienic Productions, sent out an advance man to place letters like this, buy advertising, do mailings, and hold screenings for town fathers and religious leaders. (If the town’s leaders liked the film, a "soft" campaign would be used. If they didn’t like it, a "hard" campaign, advertising it as "the movie self-styled moralists don’t want you to see," would be used. Both campaigns worked.) The advance man would be followed a week later by a crew of four -- including "Elliot Forbes" and two "nurses" -- to actually manage the film during its run. The crews would stay on the road for 20 weeks at a time. Babb even had one all-black crew for black theaters, with Olympic champion Jesse Owens substituting for Elliot Forbes.

As the Mom and Dad exploitation scheme evolved over time, it attracted imitators. By 1950 there were so many sex-hygiene roadshows that they were starting to get in each other’s way, and after a town was "scorched" by a promotional campaign, it would be spoiled for any film arriving later. So four of the films -- Mom and Dad, Street Corner, Because of Eve, and The Story of Bob and Sally -- banded together to form Modern Film Distributors, carving out territories and agreeing not to steal markets.

"He was the greatest showman this country ever saw," says one still awed associate. "People talk about Mike Todd, but Todd needed an expensive item to promote. Krog could take any piece of junk and sell it."Imagine for instance a 1948 filmed passion play out of Lawton, Okla., where telephone poles were visible behind the Cross and the were so thick, on the order of "When're y'll gonna betray me?" that it became known as "the only film that had to be dubbed from English into English."

That picture, you couldn't giveit away, but I said "Nothing's hopeless if it's advertised right,'" Babb remembers now. "I told them to give me a bottle of gin and let me see what I could come up with overnight."
After retitling the film "The prince of Peace" and creating an ad campaign with lines like "Be Brave bring your troubles and your family to history's most sublime event" and "You'll find God - right in there. Babb ended up with a movie that had crowds ilined up even in sinful New York, where The Daily News bannered its success as "The Miracle of Broadway." "We killed 'em." Babb says with satisfaction. "The thing took off like a turpentined pup."

Babb today is in his 70th year, a heavy-set man with slicked-back white hair and still sharp, hooded eyes peering out of a beefy face. He is semi-retired and recovering from a stroke - "Doing nothing the hardest job I ever had in my life - but neither his living in Palm Springs nor his 3.8-carat diamond ring in a gold and platinum seting particularly denote current wealth. "Money never worried me," he says with enviable simplicity. "I could always make it."

Born in the hamlet of Lees Creek, Ohio, Babb still likes to refer to himself, with artful modesty, as "just a country boy with a shoeshine." Called Kroger as a nickname because of his father's fondness for the B.H. Kroger brand of coffee, Babb had that wild variety of jobs that characterizes so many American entrepreneurs. Among things he refereed enough football and basketball games to make Ripley's Believe It Or Not, and staged Depression-era stunts like burying alive one Digger O'Dell right in the center of Wilmington, Ohio. It started one night in 1943 when Babb attended a town meeting in tiny Burkburnett, Tex., called because local high school girls were being impregnated in large numbers by men from a nearby Army Air Corps base. "It was a hell of a meeting, you had all these old biddies squabbling and roasting everybody, they wanted to declare the whole Air Corps off limits," Babb remembers. "Then the idea hit me, that would make a hell of a movie." 

Undaunted, Babb made the film for his own Hygenic Productions company for a bargain-basement $62,000 invested by 20 individuals. Each investor, Babb claims, made back $63,000 for each thousand put in, except for one fellow who pulled out before the film was made and ended up a suicide. Such was the power of "Mom and Dad." Its international grosses have been estimated at anywhere from $40 to $100 million, and even Time Magazine claimed in 1949 that one out of 10 people in the world had seen it. "Mom and Dad" did not flourish because of its birth footage, featuring normal, breech birth and cesarean section, or because of its puerile plot, which Babb himself disparages as dealing with "this dumb high school girl, very beautiful, who wanted to know more about her body, about sex, but every time she asked her mother a question, the mother said, 'Tut, tut, you're too young to know.' So then she went to a party, danced with a good-looking stranger, and she got pregnant."

The success flowed, rather, from Babb's extraordinary promotional abilities. Working from the premise that "You've got to tell 'em to sell 'em." Babb would simply overwhelm a town with exploitation material, even pioneering the use of direct mail "Krog would spend more money on promotion than the theater would normally gross, but our returns would be sensational," remembers K. Gordon "Cagey" Murray, a former Babb associate. "Sometimes we'd find some old wino somewhere, dress him up to look like a streetcorner preacher and stand him on a corner talking about the terrible evils of this movie. People would grab the handbills and head for the theater," where separate shows for men and women, to avoid unsightly embarrassment, were the rule. The result, wrote Time, "left no one but the livestock unware of the chance to learn the facts of life." Even today, Babb's eyes glisten when he says, "We packed 'em!" The piece de resistance here were Babb's newspaper ads, still stirring models of enticement. "It Happens Somewhere Every Night!" roared the copy. "One mistake . . . can ruin an entire lifetime of happiness. So bold - it's shocking! So human - you'll both laugh and cry! So wonderful - you'll be lucky to get in!" And the real clincher, "You May Faint But You'll Learn Facts!"

Patrons of "Mom and Dad" got more than a movie, they got "Two Nurses in Attendance" plus a lecture by "Elliot Forbes, Fearless Hygiene Commentator," strategically placed midway in the film. The purpose of the lecture was to sell books, either "Father and Son" or "Mother and Daughter," depending on the audience, antediluvian sex manuals that cost next to nothing to print but a whole dollar to buy. "They made you feel you had to buy this thing or you were the most ignorant person in the world," remembers one spectator. And this didn't happen in just one city at a time, oh no. In his salad days Babb had 300 units on the road at the same time, each complete with its own nurses and its own lecturer, and to this day he continues to run into men who tell him. "You don't know me Mr. Babb, but my name was Elliot Forbes."

In today's carefree, enlightened times, when films like Mom" and Dad" could probably be shown on television - "Oh, it'd be nothing, very tame, it'd be a Sunday school picture," Babb himself says - it is hard to imagine what a fuss its showing stirred up in the late 1940s. Yet grown men were known to faint at the "clap opera" sections, medical reels exhibiting the aftereffects of venereal disease - "In Minneapolis, we had 'em laying there by the dozens on marble benches in the lobby, like slabs in a morgue" - and by Babb's own count the film was taken either to court or before local censorship boards 428 times. "Oh, my God, you don't have any idea of the vigor with which opponents pursued this film, it was absolutely fierce," remembers Henry Fox of Arent, Fox, Kintner, Plotkin and Kahn, Washington's second-largest law firm, who supervised some of "Mom and Dads" litigation. "Its almost incredible as you thing back, but censors called it salacious, obscene, they swore they'd die before they'd show the thing."

This combination of outraged decency and lusty curiosity led to startling crowd scenes for "Mom and Dad," scenes which Babb cannily photographed and used to stimulate further throngs. And while riots were not exactly commonplace, things did tend to happen. "In Hamilton, Ohio, they came like a stampede of wild animals," Babb remembers. "They took the box office right off its foundation, they moved it clear through the glass doors into the lobby, and the girl inside with it." And in Phoenix, "They had to bring the fire department and flush men out the front of the theater because the cashier had gone berserk, berserk, and had sold 2,000 tickets for a theater that had 800 seats." But most astonishing of all was what happened in New Orleans. "The first time we played there, the priests from the various parishes came down early that morning and put themselves in a chain by locking arms, they put a complete chain around the front of the theater and no one could get through, it was like a football line," Babb says, still sort of amused.

"Well, various women said they weren't Catholics and went up to the line of priests and demanded to get through. When they refused some woman hauled off and slapped one of the priests and it started a real fist fight. It was a sort of knock-down, drag-out situation and the priests finally yielded."
Or so it seemed until the next time "Mom and Dad" showed up in town and Babb got a call from his theater manager. "He said we can't open and I said "Why" and he said. 'We have no street in front of the theater.' 'No street, what do you mean no street?' Well, during the night they had come in there with bulldozers and they had scooped up the entire street, the sidewalk, everything, right up to the building's edge and there was like a 6.8, 10-foot drop there in front of the theater," Babb, ever undaunted, built a quickie box office in the alley behind the theater, sent people in through the exits and ended up playing to capacity for "I don't know how many weeks." 

Babb never quite duplicated his success with "Mom and Dad" with the other films he promoted, but he did create a group of splendid ad lines that even today have a touch of poetry about them. "Karimoja," an African documentary, was advertised as "They wear nothing but the wind," while "Kipling's Women" was hailed as "He had a way with woman: the only way."

And then there was a film "by this foreign director, he became famous, I can't think of the fellow's name," that Babb was called on to promote. The director was Ingmar Bergman, who saw "Monika" become his first American success after Babb tagged it with one of his immortal lines, "The Story of a Bad Girl." Yet though films whose campaigns he worked on still turn up at an occasional theater, Babb has pretty much taken himself out of the movie business. "The pictures just got so bad, so filthy, they call 'em sexy but that's what I call 'em," says the man who once outraged America, shaking his head, "I just didn't have any taste for 'em."

What Kroger Babb does retain, however, is his absolute, almost religious faith in the all-conquering powers of salesmanship. "He had a theory," explains attorney Henry Fox, "That if there was a crowd of at least three people standing around, you ought to be selling them something. It was an absolute sin if you didn't." 

By releasing movies of questionable quality that were propelled by the invention of marketing techniques that leaned into sex, shame, women of ill repute and nudity that made the films irresistible to repressed moviegoers.

Among the films Babb released were Monika, the Story of a Bad Girl – Kroger bought the American rights to an Ingmar Bergman film and cut out all the meaningful stuff to wind up with a crisp 62 minutes worth of sex scenes; She Shoulda Said No!, a cautionary tale of sex and marijuana use; and the Christ story Prince of Peace that was made so cheaply that telephone poles could be glimpsed in shots of the crucifix. 
Babb was a salesman his whole life.  As a young man he had invented gimmicks to promote films, like giving away bags of groceries to raffle winners.  In Babb’s vision of humanity, you had to “Tell ‘em to sell ‘em.”  He became a specialist in buying the rights to grade-Z films about prurient subjects, then creating buzz about them to increase ticket sales.  He repackaged a 1938 film called “Child Bride” and was opposed in print by an Indiana film critic named Mildred Horn.  His solution?  He made love to her, and Mildred became his partner for life.  She wrote the screenplay for the 1945 film “Mom and Dad”, one of the most profitable films of all time. Press kits supplied by Babb provided a template for creating controversy weeks before the film would be shown in each town.  Babb and his employees would write emotional letters to the editor of local papers using pseudonyms, about how seeing “Mom and Dad” had changed their lives or saved them from unwanted pregnancy.  Leaflets were given free to local churches to distribute.  Some were in support, and others portrayed moral outrage that the film would be shown.  It created tremendous local interest in whether or not SEX (gasp) was going on between young people, innocent and ignorant of the risks of pregnancy and disease. Or you might see Olympic Medalist Jesse Owens, who gave the talk to black audiences.  They sold sex information pamphlets (written by Mildred, Babb’s wife) similar to the pamphlets shown onscreen.  It must have been an amazing carnival ride.  I wish I could have seen it in theaters, but I was about eleven when the show stopped touring.  Babb was sued for obscenity more than 400 times over this film, and he won again and again on the basis of “educational value”.

"They cannot be obtained on newsstands or at booksellers, or anywhere else. No, these books are offered exclusively to the patrons of this presentation at a slight charge over the actual costs of printing and distribution. That price -- on dollar ... Now think of it: for less than the cost of a carton of cigarettes, you can have a set of the vitally important books to be read in the privacy of your won home, and I believe with all my heart that a set of these books belongs on the bedside table of every home in this great land..."

 -- Eliot Forbes

If you bought that load of crap, then you bought yourselves a copy of The Digest of Hygiene for Mother and Daughter or The Manual of Hygiene for Father and Son (-- penned by Babb's wife, and Mom and Dad co-screen-writer, Mildred Horn). Now, I have no idea if those editions were segregated like the audiences were (-- anybody else remember the day in High School Health class when the girls had to go watch a film in the library while the boys had to go and watch one in the cafeteria?). Either way, most of the information in these pamphlets was outdated before they were even printed, and the fact that Babb had 25 different touring companies roaming the country at the same time, each with their very own Eliot Forbes to stump for safe sex never discouraged sales all that much. "Nothing's hopeless if it's advertised right."

 -- Kroger Babb

Lightning never did strike again for Babb after Mom and Dad, though. His more famous follow ups include trying to cash in on actress Lila Leeds' drug bust (-- along with fellow actor, Robert Mitchum,) with She Shoulda Said No (1949); Karamojia (1954) -- kind of a proto-mondo movie about a blood-drinking tribe of Africans; The Prince of Peace, a truly atrocious religious film out of Oklahoma with the promise of a new Bible for every paying customer; he also chopped-up Ingmar Bergman's Summer with Monkia (1953) and re-packaged as the nudie-flick The Story of a Bad Girl; and last, and least, a badly dubbed Italian version of Uncle Tom's Cabin (1965).

During the intermission of his films and after the showings, books relevant to the subject of the film were sold. Mom and Dad's distributor Modern Film Distributors sold over 45,000 copies of Man and Boy and Woman and Girl, written by Babb's wife, netting an estimated $31,000. According to Babb, these cost about eight cents to produce, and were sold for $1 apiece. While Modern Film was able to sell 45,000 on its own, Babb estimates sales of 40 million, citing "IRS figures." This sort of companion selling would become common practice for Babb: with the religious film The Lawton Story (AKA-Prince of Peace), he would sell Bibles and other spiritual literature; and with his fidelity film Why Men Leave Home books featuring beauty tips. With other films, Babb would try different approaches. For She Shoulda Said No!, an anti-marijuana film of the 1950s, he highlighted the sexual scenes and arranged "one-time-only" midnight showings, claiming that his company was working with the United States Treasury Department to release the film "in as many towns and cities as possible in the shortest possible length of time" as a public service. David F. Friedman, another successful exploitation filmmaker of the era, has attributed the "one-time-only" distribution to a quality so low that Babb wanted to cash in and move to his next stop as fast as possible. At each showing of a film, a singing of "The Star-Spangled Banner" was also required.

As well as being at the forefront of the battles over censorship and the motion picture censorship system, the exploitation genre faced numerous challenges during the 1940s and 1950s. It was estimated that Babb was sued over 400 times just for Mom and Dad. He would often use the supposed educational value of the films as a defense, also recommending it to theater owners; in his pressbook for Karamoja, he wrote, "When a stupid jerk tries to outsmart proven facts, he should be in an asylum, not a theater." Despite the criticism that Babb drew for Mom and Dad, in 1951 he received the first annual Sid Grauman Showmanship Award, presented by the Hollywood Rotary Club in honor of his accomplishments over the years.

Babb cheaply acquired the rights to what would become "She Shoulda Said No!" shortly after Robert Mitchum and Lila Leeds were arrested for marijuana use. Its original producer had struggled to get it distributed as Wild Weed, and Babb quickly presented it as The Story of Lila Leeds and Her Exposé of the Marijuana Racket, hoping that the title would draw audiences. When it failed to stir up much interest, Babb instead focused on the one scene of female nudity, using a photo of Leeds in a showgirl outfit, and retitled it "She Shoulda Said 'No'!", with taglines such as "How Bad Can a Good Girl Get . . . without losing her virtue or respect???" According to Friedman, Babb's midnight presentation of the film twice a week made more money than any other film at the same theater would earn over a full run; Friedman proceeded to use the film in his own roadshow double features. Another film, Karamoja, was marketed as a shocking portrayal of a tribe from Uganda who wore "only the wind and live[d] on blood and beer". Scenes included "the bleeding of cattle and drinking of the warm blood, and self-mutilation as a form of ornamentation", as well as a full-color circumcision scene. Karamoja proved less controversial than many of Babb's other films and grossed less.

Babb suffered from various ailments toward the end of his life, including a stroke. He retired in 1977, at 70, and died of heart failure (due to complications from diabetes) on January 29, 1980, in Palm Springs, California. His gravestone reads, "His many trips around and all over the world began in Centerville and end here in Lees Creek."