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Why KEPT? The Inspiration and the Notes. . .

I had the pleasure of re-watching the 1946 version of “The Postman Always Rings Twice” again last night. This wonderful example of early post-war film noir stars the luminous Lana Turner (how does one get that silky platinum hair?)  and the quite studly John Garfield, (as well as Hume Cronyn, Cecil Kellaway and Leon Ames in supporting roles) in the James Cain story.

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The Postman Always Rings Twice

 

 

 

 

 
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Like in his “Double Indemnity,” this story involves getting rid of an inconvenient third wheel who happens to have some money. These two stories, as well as Cain’s fabulous “Mildred Pierce,” are all basically about greed and our susceptibility to letting it drive our actions. This is usually at the hands of someone who uses sex as a convincing argument, if you have or had any scruples to begin with. Traditionally, this role was played by a woman, who became known as the femme fatale.

So these Cain movies/books and the additional “After Dark, My Sweet” – a similar type of noir story, set in the SoCal desert of around 1990 and from a book by Jim Thompson, are the inspiration for the screenplay I wrote of “Kept,” which I turned into this novel.

Having spent so much time in Palm Springs myself, I wanted to set a crime story there. Also, I wanted to remake the femme fatale role into an homme fatale, and make male-male gay attraction the driving force behind the greed this time around.

I’d often felt that the Palm Springs area was a crucible – where people from many backgrounds mixed. You had your gays, your old white Republican retirees, retired movie stars, Mexican immigrants, Marines from 29 Palms, the Native American Tribes, tourists from all over, real estate speculators, and everyone else as well. I thought there’d be lots of stories and potential for dramatic conflict in them.

And there is! It’s all in KEPT.

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How do you say “Los Feliz?”

Enjoyed this. I’ve always been of the camp who pronounced it “Loss – FEE-liz”, instructed as I was, not only by native Angelenos, but also by Joan Crawford as “Mildred Pierce,” who has one of her namesake restaurants in this neighborhood.

What better guide could there possibly be? It’s also the location where a lot of my novel “The Forest Dark” takes place, locations real and somewhat imagined. Indeed, I lived there for four years on Rosalia Road, and, if you count the adjacent Silver Lake location of a former apartment on Auburn Street, a grand total of about 15 years.

Some may cheap viagra http://new.castillodeprincesas.com/directorio/seccion/trajes-de-novia/?wpbdp_sort=-field-1 not be able to deal with the device. This only means that your phone can still work fine after cialis in canada being dropped on a sink full of water and even if-God forbid-on the toilet. People browse for source viagra low price are using e-mail blasts to sell sex, drugs and other items of less than favourable roots. Make sure to follow these simple tips and soon enough you’ll start feeling better and be on your way generic tadalafil to a gout free life. Funny how some SoCal Spanish place names can be anglicized, like “Los Feliz” or “Los Angeles” but others resist this – such as “La Cienega” or “Sepulveda,” which are still pronounced in the correct Spanish way. I can’t tell you how long it took me to learn to pronounce these when first living in L.A. All these years later I’m still working on “Tujunga.”

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