The View From Hemingway's Attic

Culture, politics, literature

William Hazelgrove

William Hazelgrove
Location
chicago, Illinois, usa
Birthday
January 27
Title
novelist
Company
novelist
Bio
Novelist who writes in Ernest Hemingways attic. His latest novel is Rocket Man

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William Hazelgrove
FEBRUARY 3, 2012 2:15PM

Mockingbird Film at Fifty

Rate: 2 Flag
If you read the book then the film follows. I always felt the book was better. To Kill A Mockingbird was just so rich in atmosphere and literary sugar that the film always seemed a bit awkward to me. Maybe it is hard for Hollywood to hit the mark on Southern stories. There is Gone with The Wind and then there is what...Cat on a Hot Tin Roof...or Mississippi Burning...but Mockingbird is Gregory Peck. No doubt. Atticus Finch became him or he became Atticus Finch. But once you saw the movie you were stuck with Gregory Peck in your head.

Scout always seemed a little tougher than the girl in the movie. Jem probably was right. Dill was Truman Capote...good luck with that one. Boo Radley was Robert Duvall. He was awful good looking for Boo but he did seem deranged. But the set never seemed to do the book justice. It just didn't conjure up that small Alabama town in the Depression. And again the novel exists apart in time so Hollywood can only do what it can with lights and sets and actors.

Of course the story set the bar. After Mockingbird there followed a whole rash of bad Southern sheriffs in small towns picking on African Americans and Northerner's. And lots of courtroom scenes in hot stuffy Southern towns. Well it's a great motif and in Mockingbird the blend of a child narrator and the adult story is dead on perfect. There would follow many child narrators set in Southern towns as well (see Tobacco Sticks) But there I go talking about the book again.

I am glad there is a Mockingbird film and I am glad there was a novel. When I tried to get Harper Lee to review my novel Tobacco Sticks, I spoke with a man Roy who said he put the book on her nightstand. She never read it. I am glad. There is really only one Southern novel of racial injustice that is resolved by a man of conscience. And only one film.

http://www.billhazelgrove.com/

Tobacco Sticks... Explosive racial tension  and a dramatic denouement in a sweaty Virginia courtroom are entwined in this haunting tale, which has all the characteristics of a good summer read. Publishers Weekly

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Picking on Northerner's what?
I have reads the book a couple of times. To tell you how many times I've watched this movie, would make me look foolish. But I have seen it a few times and it's up there with the best thing to have ever been put on film. In my humble opinion, of course. Every one has a favorite scene. Most go with the trail scene. I did too,once. But the real meaning in this film is less than a minute and should be blasted out with speakers covering this world. It should be a must for all kids who leave high school. They should have to stand up and repeat Atticus's words. That's all. After all, the Mockingbird was the thing. The thing that sprang the idea. The idea that justice is for all. Not just the wealthy, the white, the black, the different colors of people that I could not type in a hundred years. Kill the blue jays, but not the Mockingbird. They were put here to put music in our souls, for free. And they can mock. Aha! They can mock what they hear, and in todays world, I can't imagine what song they would sing. No, what they would not sing. They would not sing the hate that is parading as "Patriotism" in this country. No, no. They would fly, fly away from the hate and poison that has invaded this society like the "black plague" that killed millions in another time. I am not writing a political opinion about this. It is beyond the reach of this poor soul. No, let the rich and wealthy debate this, and leave us "common folk" alone. I, you, we, have no control of what is going to happen in this world. That is going to be done by the people in power and we have no say as to the result. I would not doubt that it is already a done deal and the politicians are just maneuvering for the next election, as usual. Listen and watch that small section of film, as Atticoneus explains to a small boy what his father taught him. That you don't kill the music, the music is what keeps us poor souls from going insane. God or fate gave us music and we should thanks the Gods every day we have it.
As an English teacher, I taught To Kill a Mockingbird for many years and it never failed to capture the imagination and hearts of my students. It is the greatest book for teaching about the evils of racial prejudice whether its manifestation is flagrant or subtle.
Hopefully will continue to be taught