The Dreamscape Universe of An Aspiring Scribe

"One describes a tale best by telling the tale. You see? The way one describes a story, to oneself or to the world, is by telling the story. It is a balancing act and it is a dream. The more accurate the map, the more it resembles the territory. The most accurate map possible would be the territory, and thus would be perfectly accurate and perfectly useless. The tale is the map that is the territory." --Neil Gaiman, 'American Gods'

Name:
Location: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

I'm a 21-year-old college student with dreams of being a professional writer. As you can tell from this blog, I certainly have the ego for it!

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

My Life With Hitchcock

It's pretty strange when you see all your sins thrown onto celluloid for all the world to see. Or if not sins necessarily, then the darker aspects of your personality.

But in a perverse way, that's what attracts me to the work of Alfred Hitchcock. The fact that I can identify with so many of his characters (for different reasons) makes his films all the more compelling for me. I can see a lot of myself in his work, and thus quite a bit in the man himself.

Take Rear Window, for example. The premise is in itself pretty simple: a magazine photographer named Jeff (Jimmy Stewart) who has broken his leg has nothing to do but sit in his wheelchair at the rear window of his apartment and watch the neighbours in the rest of the complex. He begins to notice something strange; a middle-aged couple across the way has been arguing, and the next day the wife is nowhere to be found. Her disappearance along with the husband's odd behaviour convinces Jeff that she has been murdered by her husband. At the same time Jeff has his own relationship problems, in the form of his high-class society girlfriend Lisa (the gorgeous Grace Kelly) who desperately wants Jeff to settle down and get married--to her, of course. It makes for a fairly suspenseful story, but digging beneath the surface reveals an even deeper meaning.

Jeff is a photographer; he makes his living out of watching people and things through a lens. Throughout the film, he watches the suspected murderer through his camera. And, of course, much of the basic premise is based around watching other people without their knowledge. The whole thing is very much a comment on how "we've become a race of Peeping Toms" (to quote one character) and gives us a lead character who is basically a voyuer. Or, to put it more broadly, someone who prefers fantasy over reality. Psychologically, he'd rather get involved with a woman across the way (in solving the wife's murder) than with the wonderful woman who is right there in his own apartment, forever trying to get his attention.

That doesn't totally fit me, of course. I would much rather interact with a woman (in this particular case) than watch her from a "safe" distance. But the fact is, I still do it. I just don't have the confidence in myself to develop my friendships with girls into something deeper and more rewarding. I always find it safer to keep them at arm's length and develop a kind of idealized fantasy instead, where we fall in love, we date, we get engaged, we get married, and we have a wonderful life together--but all of it happens entirely in my head.

Trying to shake myself out of that is quite a challenge; seeing it all played out on a movie screen is a definite motivation. It's sort of like God is saying, "See? See what happens when you do that? Now stop it. That's not the way it's supposed to happen; that's not the way I intended it." Well, all I can do is pray for strength, and for the personal confidence to open myself up to people so that I can have a deeper relationship with them. It's a lot more fun than 'spying' on them.

Be seeing you,
Steven

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Some Cool Things

It's certainly been awhile since I last updated this blog. Almost a month, in fact. Last time I told you all how I had finished the outline for my novel; now I can tell you that it has been minorly revised and I've actually started to write the thing! It's pretty exciting, to tell the truth, and it's coming along rather nicely.

As to other things I've been doing, there isn't a whole lot to tell. Except for one thing. It's something I never actually expected to do (at least not for quite some time), but which came upon me suddenly and I found I couldn't stop.

I've read the entirety of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Silmarillion.

Yep; the whole thing. The giant mythology that he had been working on his whole life and never really finished (his son, Christopher, had to edit and finesse it for publication). The full history that informs the more well-known The Lord of The Rings. It actually is incredible, seeing how Middle-earth began and how all the elements that go into the more widely-read story came to be. It really puts TLotR into the proper context, so that you can fully appreciate that it's really a story about the end of the Age of the Elves and the beginning of the Dominion of Men. If you're a fan of Tolkien's work, but haven't yet read The Silmarillion, you owe it to yourself to do so. Seriously.

Be seeing you,
Steven