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Bennett Miller's Capote Flatter Than Kansas, and Almost as Boring "No one got further in history with less intellectual baggage than Cicero,"1 as Freddie Binkard Artz2 liked to say. Truman Capote hasn't been in the grave quite as long as M. Tulli, but it won't take many more movies like Bennett Miller's Capote before Tru is giving the novus homo from Arpinum a run for his money.
Bennett Miller's film picks up on Capote (Philip Seymour Hoffman) just before he learns of Hickok and Smith's big score. Tru is holding forth in the Gilded Solon of Manhattan's Upper East Side circa 1959, the one place in America where you can say anything, even joke about a black man fucking a white man, if you've got the panache to pull it off.4 In the morning, Capote reads about a family of four, the Clutters, being found murdered in the small Kansas town of Holcomb. This, he decides, is his next book.
The flip side of the film's condemnation of Capote's "betrayal" of the two men is the notion that we are seeing "great art" (or at least "art") being created,6 that In Cold Blood takes us "into the mind of the murderer." The mind of a murderer, however, is rarely if ever an interesting place to be. Murderers, and violent criminals generally, are almost invariably stupid, selfish, and cruel, with much less humanity, or even "passion," than the people they prey upon.7
If Capote were alive today, I imagine he'd have mixed feelings about Capote. He would be pleased, if unsurprised, that a film could and would be marketed that simply bore his last name, but he would certainly hate the fact that the film makes look older and fatter than he was when he was writing the book. AfterwordsIn Cold Blood was made into a well-reviewed film back in the sixties, starring (of course) Robert Blake as Perry Smith. Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), more or less the last gasp of the fifties Manhattan glamour that Capote fitfully portrays, is more enjoyable than the fitfully entertaining but often pulpy and smutty novella that Capote actually wrote.9 Capote himself wrote the screenplay for Beat the Devil (1954), which has an extremely funny first half, but stumbles at the conclusion. All three films are available on DVD. A second Capote film, starring Toby Jones as Capote, originally titled Have You Heard? but now apparently untitled, is due out next year. A newly discovered novella by Capote, Summer Crossing, has just been released, picking up a seriously bitchy review from Michiko Kakutani .10 Gerald Clarke's fat 1988 bio makes fascinating reading even in the unlikely event that your opinion of Capote's talents is lower than mine. Notes
2. Dr. Artz taught me the intellectual history of Europe from St. Augustine to Marx back in the day at Oberlin College, somewhere east of Cleveland. I never really appreciated Freddie at the time, but his book Reaction and Revolution: Europe 1813–1832 has been in print for more than 70 years. Not bad for a kid from the stix drunk on French poetry! 3. Capote became famous for his short stories, published in magazines like Vogue and Mademoiselle, when he was still a teenager. Despite an almost complete lack of creative imagination he could do no more than write the same "symbolic" story over and over Capote had a remarkable knack for meeting the educated reading public's expectations for "fine writing." His best work, which shows off his real abilities as a stylist, is his collection of travel pieces bearing the Capotesque title Local Color. If he had felt comfortable writing about his real subject, being young and gay in Manhattan, he might have had more to say.
5. Among other things, we hear Capote complaining of the "torture" of waiting for the executions to come through. But we all make snide, unfeeling comments from time to time, don't we? Particularly if we're alcoholic, self-dramatizing narcissists with a book to sell. 6. Among other things, we get the well-established cliché of Capote earnestly pecking away at a manual typewriter, even though, as he frequently said, he always wrote in long-hand, with a number two pencil. 7. The mind of a murderer is commonplace not least because killing comes quite naturally to humans. A prison warden told my grandmother that his model prisoners the ones he trusted were all murderers. They all had someone they wanted to kill, and once they did so they were at peace with themselves and the world. Soldiers, particularly elites like fighter pilots, often say that war is the best place a young man can be. Being paid to kill! Can't beat it with a stick! 8. Capote himself was a famous practitioner of the New Yorker method of execution. His 1957 interview of Marlon Brando, published as "The Duke in His Own Domain," made Marlon look like "public ass number one," as Pauline Kael put it. While Marlon could be his own worst enemy, describing his plans for a diet while demolishing an enormous meal, the main crime of which Capote convicts him disloyalty to Broadway was hardly a hanging offense.
10. Kakutani is so mean to poor Truman that I almost feel embarrassed for pissing on the little schmuck's grave. The republic of letters is seldom a happy place. November 2005 | Issue 50 ALSO: Check out other fine articles and reviews by the author. |