reposting from 2011 ..keeping Toback alive.
I could not tell you how often one gets inspired by watching an episode of Intervention.   Regardless, I recently  had this happen to me. The episode seemed like 2 to 3 
chapters out of  an awesome Vollmann I'd only half read, losing track of it three months ago.  And both the television show and the
 book were now causing me to make further connections with 2 of my most 
recent movie revisitations.
The episode was titled " Latisha
 ', and getting inside her world for 60 minutes broke my heart.   Her 
crack addiction kept her worldview obscured by a cheery veil, elevating 
her self image to 'Queen of the streets' in the fabulous ghetto of her 
diseased existence.    The episode  broke the mold of A + E 'reality' 
drama.  The producers and director actually filmed with two lenses;  one
 a lens of clarity,  the moments of intoxication and cocaine psychosis 
embarrassingly clear.  The second lens used was that of Latisha's own 
self protective or rather self projective denial.  A sort of denial that
 is, mostly by the nature of both the disease of addiction and the 
nature of crack cocaine, narcissisticly destructive;  self perpetuating 
by  delusions of self importance.
This projection colored my sense
 of Latisha's experience of her world.  It allowed me the escapism of  
her highly stimulated thought process and  the momentary   joy of her 
imaginary relationships.
I'd recently been chipping away at William T. Vollmann's :" The Royal Family",
 a sprawling dissection of genealogy and stratum of San Francisco pimps ,
 whores, and the Unicorn of this particular zoo, the elusive "Queen of 
the Whores", aka "Africa."
Vollmann's male protag is haunted and 
degenerate.   He is a noirish detective by way of a Proustian sad  sack,
 dropped into a transgressive, insular world of fucked up folk.  He is 
one half romantically haunted by a dead lover and one half digging 
progressively deeper into the mud of the royal whoredom; eventually 
projecting his obsessions on a whore who Judy Bartons herself into his 
deceased love.
How did anything  strike beyond the obvious remembrance of the cool novel I'd failed in finishing?
What
 this television episode and this post modern novel share is a quality 
that also appears in films,  though usually sweatier and involving 
pacing or the cover up of something like a heist or a murder.
This
 distorted self projection and fucked up self will  is something of a 
germ.  Infecting the host it leads to secondary diseases, such as 
compulsive behavior and addiction, be it gambling, alcohol, drugs, what 
have you.  In films, lucky for us, it also results in projecting a world
 of their own diseased thinking's creation, one that is  entertaining 
while illuminating, as well as insane, colorful and full of constant 
heart pounding danger.
I'm thinking of the sweat on Nomi Malone's face in SHOWGIRLS.
  She is three different things and they are also one and the same:  
victim or pursuant of Capitalism,  a dancer who is a wannabee star, and 
an Addict.   Not a surprise when in the film's fourth quarter she is 
revealed as an ex junkie, and we see her come alive when she does blow.
Her
 sweaty forehead and bugged out 'star' eyes are demonic and bothered, a 
distinct image yet mere mutation on the aloof vacancy in James Caan's 
eyes in THE GAMBLER.  Any interiority ironically revealed through voiceover and the occasional sound bridge.
Both
 figures drawn here are playing the losing card.  How can Nomi ever gain
 status and respect without stealing them? And how can a human being, as
 Ivy League as he may be, ever beat the Numbers?
In a classroom 
scene, Caan's collegiate professor speaks in a Psych or Philosophy class
 about intangibles such as Desire and Will.  Things that , for Caan's 
alter ego of nighttime degenerate gambler find reflected only the 
simplest materialist games.  The only expressions of emotive power and 
psychology in the film are those of people in Caan's world..those 
gangsters affected by the hustler's life and the family members 
distraught by Caan's risk and loss. Caan, meanwhile, remains a blank 
mirrored screen,  and antithetical to a Nomi Malone, his own wild  inner
 process is laid bare only by the measure of how others respond to his 
madness.
The film illuminates his disease by showing him as 
leading almost two entirely different lives.  His battle is built around
 shame and a destructive belief of self grandeur, each fueling the 
other.
These filmed losers are lovers and their hatred of self and
 desperation to be loved is made visible in neon gemmed manicures, 
headdresses, coke nails, maternal robberies,   and Atlantic City betting
 benders.
God's Little Acre
Lord, make way for gold
the girlfriend experience
chelsea's work
Trash Humpers
broken, faked, MADE