"I want to leave all of you with a weird, strange, utterly pervasive sense of the
bad juju ramifications extending beyond the last page of my books," says Ellroy as
he stands on a bluff overlooking the smoggy skyline of his beloved Los Angeles. Anyone
who has read the author of White Jazz, The Big Nowhere, or L.A. Confidential knows
he's not just talking shit. This 1994 documentary by Austrian filmmaker Jud does
that, too, after a fashion. It's not so much your standard documentary as it is a
travelogue of Ellroy's dark places, from the gritty El Monte alleyway where his mother's
nude corpse was found when the author was 10 years old to the well-trimmed suburban
lawn where the bisected carcass of Elizabeth Short -- The Black Dahlia -- was discovered,
setting off the largest manhunt in LAPD history. In between, Ellroy dissects his
earlier novels, explores his freaky childhood haunts (cruising through a posh section
of L.A. in his powder-blue Caddy he gestures towards a house and comments that he
"must have broke in there I don't know how many times, back when B&E was easy"),
and ruminates on the nature of what he does and why he's become a Raymond Chandler
for the new age. In between, Jud inserts long passages of HelL.A. life, shots of
winos sprawled comatose in storefronts, hookers milling about Chevy station wagons,
and everywhere, the omnipresent LAPD cruisers and the thick, burly officers rousting
vagrants and bums. Not surprisingly, Ellroy appears and speaks as he writes. He resembles
an aging insurance salesman with vanishing hair more than a bestselling writer, but
no salesman in his right mind would ever shroud himself in that many flavors of bad
Hawaiian print shirts. His voice is clipped, precise, gravelly, and he's given to
speaking in the sentence-fragment stream of consciousness style that makes up his
best work. His penchant for bizarre, gutter poetry is on display at a local booksigning,
where he inscribes each novel with an original, nasty rhyme, and, later, this self-described
"demon dog" sits on the beach, howling like a lunatic. Is he mad? My Dark Places,
which chronicles his obsessive search for his mother's murderer 40 years after the
fact leads one to believe that certainly Ellroy is not your average bear. He's been
marked by a life growing up in the shadow of some of L.A.'s most seedy, spiritually
strip-mined areas, and that arcane Forties and Fifties pop culture mélange that
makes up the bulk of his novels -- "white male rage," he calls it -- dogs him in real
life as well. Like a Fifties grifter propelled forward in time, he drops words and
phrases like "dig it," "groovy," and "daddy-o" like other people say "you know."
It's a portrait of the writer as a young hepcat, huffing Benzedrine, sniffing panties,
and then finally settling down to either die or write. Thankfully for us, he learned
to write.
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
James Ellroy: Demon Dog of American Crime Fiction 
Film Vault Suggested Links
On the Ropes 
Now and Then: From Frosh to Seniors 
Storefront Hitchcock 
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