旅行终点

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主演:杰森·席格尔,杰西·艾森伯格,安娜·克拉姆斯基,麦米·古默,琼·库萨克,朗·里维斯顿,米奇·萨姆纳,琳赛·伊丽莎白

类型:电影地区:美国语言:英语年份:2015

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 剧照

旅行终点 剧照 NO.1旅行终点 剧照 NO.2旅行终点 剧照 NO.3旅行终点 剧照 NO.4旅行终点 剧照 NO.5旅行终点 剧照 NO.6旅行终点 剧照 NO.13旅行终点 剧照 NO.14旅行终点 剧照 NO.15旅行终点 剧照 NO.16旅行终点 剧照 NO.17旅行终点 剧照 NO.18旅行终点 剧照 NO.19旅行终点 剧照 NO.20

 长篇影评

 1 ) Where does the depression come from

交流过程中Wallace几次拜托Lipsky,不要把他鸡汤化,不要带立场地quote,甚至不要给他的头巾加上任何因果。小说家试图唤醒着自己作品里人物的自主意识,却难以把握自我“真实形象”该如何示人。采访报道向任何一个方向的引领都让Wallace浑身不自在。

自我真实形象到底存在么?我斗胆猜测,这可能是抑郁的一个来源:来源于自我身份认同的无所适从。甚至让我在观影时感到了一丝卑微的共鸣。在一群人中感到庸俗无味,整日奶粉绿卡;在另一群人中又感到碌碌无为,成天烟酒concert。打另一个不恰当的比喻,看微博上爱国青年诅咒起人来一个比一个狠,身边的一代移民黑起这个民族也是鞭辟入里,there is nothing in between?中间这些人呢?都是沉默的大多数?闷声发大财?

电影本身也在为过度脸谱化担忧。对"Wallace不想被portray成任何形象”这个结论的概述,是否也其实是一种概括式的引领?电影在四平八稳中接受这种存在的本身;其实任何概括都是自我意识的投影;如果认为这电影罗里吧嗦无聊空洞,也没什么对错可言。抑郁或许也来自于对对错的判断,对意义的寻找。

片尾Lipsky偷偷溜进Wallace的书房,拉开窗帘的一瞬间,冬季阳光在积雪折射下,满屋子惨白的记忆;45岁的他想到当年和Wallace分别时,Wallace叫他不要成为自己。很多事情注定当时是理解不了的,回瞰时只记得那种感觉,一种试图努力去分析努力去规划未来的感觉;最后发现一切选择和寻找都没有意义,你我能做的只是听从命运的安排随波逐流。

 2 ) The Lost Years & Last Days of David Foster Wallace

In case anyone needs to read it.

source:
http://kurtrudder.blogspot.jp/2009/01/lost-years-last-days-of-david-foster.html

issue:
1064 Rolling Stone, Oct. 30, 2008

autour:
David Lipsky

The Lost Years & Last Days of David Foster Wallace
He was the greatest writer of his generation - and also its most tormented. In the wake of his tragic suicide, his friends and family reveal the lifelong struggle of a beautiful mind

by David Lipsky

He was six-feet-two, and on a good day he weighed 200 pounds. He wore granny glasses with a head scarf, points knotted at the back, a look that was both pirate-like and housewife-ish. He always wore his hair long. He had dark eyes, soft voice, caveman chin, a lovely, peak-lipped mouth that was his best feature. He walked with an ex-athlete's saunter, a roll from the heels, as if anything physical was a pleasure. David Foster Wallace worked surprising turns on nearly everything: novels, journalism, vacation. His life was an information hunt, collecting hows and whys. "I received 500,000 discrete bits of information today," he once said, "of which maybe 25 are important. My job is to make some sense of it." He wanted to write "stuff about what it feels like to live. Instead of being a relief from what it feels like to live." Readers curled up in the nooks and clearings of his style: his comedy, his brilliance, his humaneness.

His life was a map that ends at the wrong destination. Wallace was an A student through high school, he played football, he played tennis, he wrote a philosophy thesis and a novel before he graduated from Amherst, he went to writing school, published the novel, made a city of squalling, bruising, kneecapping editors and writers fall moony-eyed in love with him. He published a thousand-page novel, received the only award you get in the nation for being a genius, wrote essays providing the best feel anywhere of what it means to be alive in the contemporary world, accepted a special chair at California's Pomona College to teach writing, married, published another book and, last month, hanged himself at age 46.

"The one thing that really should be said about David Foster Wallace is that this was a once-in-a-century talent," says his friend and former editor Colin Harrison. "We may never see a guy like this again in our lifetimes — that I will shout out. He was like a comet flying by at ground level."

His 1996 novel, Infinite Jest, was Bible-size and spawned books of interpretation and commentary, like Understanding David Foster Wallace — a book his friends might have tried to write and would have lined up to buy. He was clinically depressed for decades, information he limited to family and his closest friends. "I don't think that he ever lost the feeling that there was something shameful about this," his father says. "His instinct was to hide it."

After he died on September 12th, readers crowded the Web with tributes to his generosity, his intelligence. "But he wasn't Saint Dave," says Jonathan Franzen, Wallace's best friend and the author of The Corrections. "This is the paradox of Dave: The closer you get, the darker the picture, but the more genuinely lovable he was. It was only when you knew him better that you had a true appreciation of what a heroic struggle it was for him not merely to get along in the world, but to produce wonderful writing."

David grew up in Champaign, Illinois. His father, Jim, taught philosophy at the University of Illinois. His mother, Sally, taught English at a local community college. It was an academic household — poised, considerate — language games in the car, the rooms tidy, the bookcase the hero. "I have these weird early memories," Wallace told me during a series of interviews in 1996. "I remember my parents reading Ulysses out loud to each other in bed, holding hands and both lovin' something really fiercely." Sally hated to get angry — it took her days to recover from a shout. So the family developed a sort of interoffice conflict mail. When his mother had something stern to say, she'd write it up in a letter. When David wanted something badly — raised allowance, more liberal bedtime — he'd slide a letter under his parents' door.

David was one of those eerie, perfect combinations of two parents' skills. The titles of his father's books — Ethical Norms, Particular Cases — have the sound of Wallace short-story titles. The tone of his mother's speaking voice contains echoes of Wallace's writing voice: Her textbook, Practically Painless English, sounds like a Wallace joke. She uses phrases like "perishing hot" for very hot, "snoof" for talking in your sleep, "heave your skeleton" for go to bed. "David and I both owe a huge debt to my mother," says his sister, Amy, two years younger. "She has a way of talking that I've never heard anywhere else."

David was, from an early age, "very fragile," as he put it. He loved TV, and would get incredibly excited watching a program like Batman or The Wild Wild West. (His parents rationed the "rough" shows. One per week.) David could memorize whole shows of dialogue and predict, like a kind of plot weatherman, when the story was going to turn, where characters would end up. No one saw or treated him as a genius, but at age 14, when he asked what his father did, Jim sat David down and walked him through a Socratic dialogue. "I was astonished by how sophisticated his understanding was," Jim says. "At that point, I figured out that he really, really was extraordinarily bright."

David was a big-built kid; he played football — quarterback — until he was 12 or 13, and would always speak like an athlete, the disappearing G's, "wudn't," "dudn't" and "idn't" and "sumpin'." "The big thing I was when I was little was a really serious jock," Wallace told me. "I mean, I had no artistic ambition. I played citywide football. And I was really good. Then I got to junior high, and there were two guys in the city who were better quarterbacks than me. And people started hitting each other a lot harder, and I discovered that I didn't really love to hit people. That was a huge disappointment." After his first day of football practice at Urbana High School, he came home and chucked it. He offered two explanations to his parents: They expected him to practice every day, and the coaches did too much cursing.

He had also picked up a racket. "I discovered tennis on my own," Wallace said, "taking public-park lessons. For five years, I was seriously gonna be a pro tennis player. I didn't look that good, but I was almost impossible to beat. I know that sounds arrogant. It's true." On court, he was a bit of a hustler: Before a match, he'd tell his opponent, "Thank you for being here, but you're just going to cream me."

By the time he was 14, he felt he could have made nationals. "Really be in the junior show. But just at the point it became important to me, I began to choke. The more scared you get, the worse you play." Plus it was the Seventies — Pink Floyd, bongs. "I started to smoke a lot of pot when I was 15 or 16, and it's hard to train." He laughed. "You don't have that much energy."

It was around this time that the Wallaces noticed something strange about David. He would voice surprising requests, like wanting to paint his bedroom black. He was constantly angry at his sister. When he was 16, he refused to go to her birthday party. "Why would I want to celebrate her birthday?" he told his parents.

"David began to have anxiety attacks in high school," his father recalls. "I noticed the symptoms, but I was just so unsophisticated about these matters. The depression seemed to take the form of an evil spirit that just haunted David." Sally came to call it the "black hole with teeth." David withdrew. "He spent a lot of time throwing up junior year," his sister remembers. One wall of his bedroom was lined with cork, for magazine photos of tennis stars. David pinned an article about Kafka to the wall, with the headline THE DISEASE WAS LIFE ITSELF.

"I hated seeing those words," his sister tells me, and starts to cry. "They seemed to sum up his existence. We couldn't understand why he was acting the way he was, and so of course my parents were exasperated, lovingly exasperated."

David graduated high school with perfect grades. Whatever his personal hurricane was, it had scattered trees and moved on. He decided to go to Amherst, which is where his father had gone, too. His parents told him he would enjoy the Berkshire autumn. Instead, he missed home — the farms and flat horizons, roads stretching contentedly nowhere. "It's fall," David wrote back. "The mountains are pretty, but the landscape isn't beautiful the way Illinois is."

Wallace had lugged his bags into Amherst the fall of 1980 — Reagan coming in, the Seventies capsized, preppies everywhere. He brought a suit to campus. "It was kind of a Sears suit, with this Scotch-plaid tie," says his college roommate and close friend Mark Costello, who went on to become a successful novelist himself. "Guys who went to Amherst, who came from five prep schools, they always dress a notch down. No one's bringing a suit. That was just the Wallace sense that going East is a big deal, and you have to not embarrass us. My first impression was that he was really very out of step."

Costello came from working-class Massachusetts, seven kids, Irish-Catholic household. He and Wallace connected. "Neither of us fit into the Gatsby-ite mold," Costello says. At Amherst David perfected the style he would wear for the rest of his life: turtleneck, hoodie, big basketball shoes. The look of parking-lot kids who in Illinois were called Dirt Bombs. "A slightly tough, slightly waste-product-y, tennis-playing persona," Costello says. Wallace was also amazingly fast and good company, even just on a walk across campus. "I'd always wanted to be an impressionist," Wallace said, "but I just didn't have an agile enough vocal and facial register to do it." Crossing a green, it was The Dave Show. He would recount how people walked, talked, held their heads, pictured their lives. "Just very connected to people," Costello recalls. "Dave had this ability to be inside someone else's skin."

Observing people from afar, of course, can be a way of avoiding them up close. "I was a complete just total banzai weenie studier in college," Wallace recalled. "I was really just scared of people. For instance, I would brave the TV pit — the central TV room — to watch Hill Street Blues, 'cause that was a really important show to me."

One afternoon, April of sophomore year, Costello came back to the dorm they shared and found Wallace seated in his chair. Desk clean, bags packed, even his typewriter, which weighed as much as the clothes put together.

"Dave, what's going on?" Costello asked.

"I'm sorry, I'm so sorry," Wallace said. "I know I'm really screwing you."

He was pulling out of college. Costello drove him to the airport. "He wasn't able to talk about it," Costello recalls. "He was crying, he was mortified. Panicky. He couldn't control his thoughts. It was mental incontinence, the equivalent of wetting his pants."

"I wasn't very happy there," Wallace told me later. "I felt kind of inadequate. There was a lot of stuff I wanted to read that wasn't part of any class. And Mom and Dad were just totally cool."

Wallace went home to hospitalization, explanations to his parents, a job. For a while, he drove a school bus. "Here he was, a guy who was really shaky, kind of Holden Caulfield, driving a school bus through lightning storms," Costello recalls. "He wrote me a letter all outraged, about the poor screening procedures for school-bus drivers in central Illinois."

Wallace would visit his dad's philosophy classes. "The classes would turn into a dialogue between David and me," his father remembers. "The students would just sit looking around, 'Who is this guy?' " Wallace devoured novels — "pretty much everything I've read was read during that year." He also told his parents how he'd felt at school. "He would talk about just being very sad, and lonely," Sally says. "It didn't have anything to do with being loved. He just was very lonely inside himself."

He returned to Amherst in the fall, to room with Costello, shaky but hardened. "Certain things had been destroyed in his head," Costello says. "In the first half of his Amherst career, he was trying to be a regular person. He was on the debate team, the sort of guy who knows he's going to be a success." Wallace had talked about going into politics; Costello recalls him joking, "No one is going to vote for somebody who's been in a nuthouse." Having his life fall apart narrowed his sense of what his options were — and the possibilities that were left became more real to him. In a letter to Costello, he wrote, "I want to write books that people will read 100 years from now."

Back at school junior year, he never talked much about his breakdown. "It was embarrassing and personal," Costello says. "A zone of no jokes." Wallace regarded it as a failure, something he should have been able to control. He routinized his life. He'd be the first tray at the dining hall for supper, he'd eat, drink coffee dipped with tea bags, library study till 11, head back to the room, turn on Hawaii Five-O, then a midnight gulp from a scotch bottle. When he couldn't turn his mind off, he'd say, "You know what? I think this is a two-shot night," slam another and sleep.

In 1984, Costello left for Yale Law School; Wallace was alone senior year. He double-majored — English and philosophy, which meant two big writing projects. In philosophy, he took on modal logic. "It looked really hard, and I was really scared about it," he said. "So I thought I'd do this kind of jaunty, hundred-page novel." He wrote it in five months, and it clocked in at 700 pages. He called it The Broom of the System.

Wallace published stories in the Amherst literary magazine. One was about depression and a tricyclic anti-anxiety medication he had been on for two months. The medication "made me feel like I was stoned and in hell," he told me. The story dealt with the in-hell parts:

You are the sickness yourself.... You realize all this...when you look at the black hole and it's wearing your face. That's when the Bad Thing just absolutely eats you up, or rather when you just eat yourself up. When you kill yourself. All this business about people committing suicide when they're "severely depressed;" we say, "Holy cow, we must do something to stop them from killing themselves!" That's wrong. Because all these people have, you see, by this time already killed themselves, where it really counts.... When they "commit suicide," they're just being orderly.

It wasn't just writing the novel that made Wallace realize his future would lie in fiction. He also helped out friends by writing their papers. In a comic book, this would be his origin story, the part where he's bombarded with gamma rays, bitten by the spider. "I remember realizing at the time, 'Man, I'm really good at this. I'm a weird kind of forger. I can sound kind of like anybody.' "

Grad school was next. Philosophy would be an obvious choice. "My dad would have limbs removed without anesthetic before ever pushing his kids about anything," Wallace said. "But I knew I was gonna have to go to grad school. I applied to these English programs instead, and I didn't tell anybody. Writing The Broom of the System, I felt like I was using 97 percent of me, whereas philosophy was using 50 percent."

After Amherst, Wallace went to the University of Arizona for an MFA. It was where he picked up the bandanna: "I started wearing them in Tucson because it was a hundred degrees all the time, and I would perspire so much I would drip on the page." The woman he was dating thought the bandanna was a wise move. "She was like a Sixties lady, a Sufi Muslim. She said there were various chakras, and one of the big ones she called the spout hole, at the very top of your cranium. Then I began thinking about the phrase 'Keeping your head together.' It makes me feel kind of creepy that people view it as a trademark or something — it's more a recognition of a weakness, which is that I'm just kind of worried that my head's gonna explode."

Arizona was a strange experience: the first classrooms where people weren't happy to see him. He wanted to write the way he wanted to write — funny and overstuffed and nonlinear and strange. The teachers were all "hardass realists." That was the first problem. Problem two was Wallace. "I think I was kind of a prick," he said. "I was just unteachable. I had that look — 'If there were any justice, I'd be teaching this class' — that makes you want to slap a student." One of his stories, "Here and There," went on to win a 1989 O. Henry Prize after it was published in a literary magazine. When he turned it in to his professor, he received a chilly note back: "I hope this isn't representative of the work you're hoping to do for us. We'd hate to lose you."

"What I hated was how disingenuous it was," Wallace recalled. "'We'd hate to lose you.' You know, if you're gonna threaten, say that."

Wallace sent his thesis project out to agents. He got a lot of letters back: "Best of luck in your janitorial career." Bonnie Nadell was 25, working a first job at San Francisco's Frederick Hill Agency. She opened a letter from Wallace, read a chapter from his book. "I loved it so much," Nadell says. It turned out there was a writer named David Rains Wallace. Hill and Nadell agreed that David should insert his mother's maiden name, which is how he became David Foster Wallace. She remained his agent for the rest of his life. "I have this thing, the nearest Jewish mother, I will simply put my arms around her skirt and just attach myself," Wallace said. "I don't know what it means. Maybe sort of WASP deprivation."

Viking won the auction for the novel, "with something like a handful of trading stamps." Word spread; professors turned nice. "I went from borderline ready-to-get-kicked-out to all these tight-smiled guys being, 'Glad to see you, we're proud of you, you'll have to come over for dinner.' It was so delicious: I felt kind of embarrassed for them, they didn't even have integrity about their hatred."

Wallace went to New York to meet his editor, Gerry Howard, wearing a U2 T-shirt. "He seemed like a very young 24," Howard says. The shirt impressed him. "U2 wasn't really huge then. And there's a hypersincerity to U2, which I think David was in tune with — or that he really wanted to be sincere, even though his brain kept turning him in the direction of the ironic." Wallace kept calling Howard — who was only 36 — "Mr. Howard," never "Gerry." It would become his business style: a kind of mock formality. People often suspected it was a put-on. What it was was Midwestern politeness, the burnout in the parking lot still nodding "sir" to the vice principal. "There was kind of this hum of superintelligence behind the 'aw, shucks' manner," Howard recalls.

The Broom of the System was published in January of 1987, Wallace's second and last year at Arizona. The title referred to something his mother's grandmother used to say, as in, "Here, Sally, have an apple, it's the broom of the system." "I wasn't aware David had picked up on that," his mother says. "I was thrilled that a family expression became the title of his book."

The novel hit. "Everything you could hope for," Howard says. "Critics praised it, it sold quite well, and David was off to the races."

His first brush with fame was a kind of gateway experience. Wallace would open The Wall Street Journal, see his face transmuted into a dot-cartoon. "Some article like 'Hotshot's Weird New Novel,' " he said. "I'd feel really good, really cool, for exactly 10 seconds. Probably not unlike a crack high, you know? I was living an incredibly American life: 'Boy, if I could just achieve X, Y and Z, everything would be OK.' " Howard bought Wallace's second book, Girl With Curious Hair, a collection of the stories he was finishing up at Arizona. But something in Wallace worried him. "I have never encountered a mind like David's," he says. "It functioned at such an amazingly high level, he clearly lived in a hyperalert state. But on the other hand, I felt that David's emotional life lagged far behind his mental life. And I think he could get lost in the gap between the two."

Wallace was already drifting into the gap. He won a Whiting Writers' Award — stood on a stage with Eudora Welty — graduated Arizona, went to an artists' colony, met famous writers, knew the famous writers were seeing his name in more magazines ("absolutely exhilarating and really scary at the same time"), finished the stories. And then he was out of ideas. He tried to write in a cabin in Tucson for a while, then returned home to write — Mom and Dad doing the grocery shopping. He accepted a one-year slot teaching philosophy at Amherst, which was strange: Sophomores he had known were now his students. In the acknowledgments for the book he was completing, he thanks "The Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Fund for Aimless Children."

He was balled up, tied up. "I started hating everything I did," he said. "Worse than stuff I'd done in college. Hopelessly confused, unbelievably bad. I was really in a panic, I didn't think I was going to be able to write anymore. And I got this idea: I'd flourished in an academic environment — my first two books had sort of been written under professors." He applied to graduate programs in philosophy, thinking he could write fiction in his spare time. Harvard offered a full scholarship. The last thing he needed to reproduce his college years was to reactivate Mark Costello.

"So he comes up with this whole cockamamie plan," Costello recalls. "He says, 'OK, you're going to go back to Boston, practice law, and I'm going to go to Harvard. We'll live together — it'll be just like the house we had at Amherst.' It all ended up being a train wreck."

They found an apartment in Somerville. Student ghetto: rickety buildings, outdoor staircases. Costello would come home with his briefcase, click up the back stairs, David would call out, "Hi, honey, how was your day?" But Wallace wasn't writing fiction. He had thought course work would be a sideline; but professors expected actual work.

Not writing was the kind of symptom that presents a problem of its own. "He could get himself into places where he was pretty helpless," Costello says. "Basically it was the same symptoms all along: this incredible sense of inadequacy, panic. He once said to me that he wanted to write to shut up the babble in his head. He said when you're writing well, you establish a voice in your head, and it shuts up the other voices. The ones that are saying, 'You're not good enough, you're a fraud.' "

"Harvard was just unbelievably bleak," Wallace said. It became a substance marathon: drinking, parties, drugs. "I didn't want to feel it," he said. "It was the only time in my life that I'd gone to bars, picked up women I didn't know." Then for weeks, he would quit drinking, start mornings with a 10-mile run. "You know, this kind of very American sports training — I will fix this by taking radical action." Schwarzenegger voice: "If there's a problem, I will train myself out of it. I will work harder."

Various delays were holding up the publication of his short-story collection Girl With Curious Hair. He started to feel spooked. "I'm this genius writer," he remembered. "Everything I do's gotta be ingenious, blah, blah, blah, blah." The five-year clock was ticking again. He'd played football for five years. Then he'd played high-level tennis for five years. Now he'd been writing for five years. "What I saw was, 'Jesus, it's the same thing all over again.' I'd started late, showed tremendous promise — and the minute I felt the implications of that promise, it caved in. Because see, by this time, my ego's all invested in the writing. It's the only thing I've gotten food pellets from the universe for. So I feel trapped: 'Uh-oh, my five years is up, I've gotta move on.' But I didn't want to move on."

Costello watched while Wallace slipped into a depressive crisis. "He was hanging out with women who were pretty heavily into drugs — that was kind of alluring to Dave — skanking around Somerville, drinking himself blotto."

It was the worst period Wallace had ever gone through. "It may have been what in the old days was called a spiritual crisis," he said. "It was just feeling as though every axiom of your life turned out to be false. And there was nothing, and you were nothing — it was all a delusion. But you were better than everyone else because you saw that it was a delusion, and yet you were worse because you couldn't function."

By November, the anxieties had become locked and fixed. "I got really worried I was going to kill myself. And I knew, that if anybody was fated to fuck up a suicide attempt, it was me." He walked across campus to Health Services and told a psychiatrist, "Look, there's this issue. I don't feel real safe."

"It was a big deal for me, because I was so embarrassed," Wallace said. "But it was the first time I ever treated myself like I was worth something."

By making his announcement, Wallace had activated a protocol: Police were notified, he had to withdraw from school. He was sent to McLean, which, as psychiatric hospitals go, is pedigreed: Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton all put in residences there; it's the setting for the memoir Girl, Interrupted. Wallace spent his first day on suicide watch. Locked ward, pink room, no furniture, drain in the floor, observation slot in the door. "When that happens to you," David said, smiling, "you get unprecedentedly willing to examine other alternatives for how to live."

Wallace spent eight days in McLean. He was diagnosed as a clinical depressive and was prescribed a drug, called Nardil, developed in the 1950s. He would have to take it from then on. "We had a brief, maybe three-minute audience with the psychopharmacologist," his mother says. Wallace would have to quit drinking, and there was a long list of foods — certain cheeses, pickles, cured meats — he would have to stay away from.

He started to clean up. He found a way to get sober, worked very hard at it, and wouldn't drink for the rest of his life. Girl With Curious Hair finally appeared in 1989. Wallace gave a reading in Cambridge; 13 people showed up, including a schizophrenic woman who shrieked all the way through his performance. "The book's coming out seemed like a kind of shrill, jagged laugh from the universe, this thing sort of lingering behind me like a really nasty fart."

What followed was a phased, deliberate return to the world. He worked as a security guard, morning shift, at Lotus Software. Polyester uniform, service baton, walking the corridors. "I liked it because I didn't have to think," he said. "Then I quit for the incredibly brave reason that I got tired of getting up so early in the morning."

Next, he worked at a health club in Auburndale, Massachusetts. "Very chichi," he said. "They called me something other than a towel boy, but I was in effect a towel boy. I'm sitting there, and who should walk in to get their towel but Michael Ryan. Now, Michael Ryan had received a Whiting Writers' Award the same year I had. So I see this guy that I'd been up on the fucking rostrum with, having Eudora Welty give us this prize. It's two years later — it's the only time I've literally dived under something. He came in, and I pretended not very subtly to slip, and lay facedown, and didn't respond. I left that day, and I didn't go back."

He wrote Bonnie Nadell a letter; he was done with writing. That wasn't exactly her first concern. "I was worried he wasn't going to survive," she says. He filled in Howard, too. "I contemplated the circumstance that the best young writer in America was handing out towels in a health club," Howard says. "How fucking sad."

Wallace met Jonathan Franzen in the most natural way for an author: as a fan. He sent Franzen a nice letter about his first novel, The Twenty-Seventh City. Franzen wrote back, they arranged to meet in Cambridge. "He just flaked," Franzen recalls. "He didn't show up. That was a fairly substance-filled period of his life."

By April of 1992, both were ready for a change. They loaded Franzen's car and headed for Syracuse to scout apartments. Franzen needed "somewhere to relocate with my wife where we could both afford to live and not have anyone tell us how screwed up our marriage was." Wallace's need was simpler: cheap space, for writing. He had been researching for months, haunting rehab facilities and halfway houses, taking quiet note of voices and stories, people who had fallen into the gaps like him. "I got very assertive research- and finagle-wise," he said. "I spent hundreds of hours at three halfway houses. It turned out you could just sit in the living room — nobody is as gregarious as somebody who has recently stopped using drugs."

He and Franzen talked a lot about what writing should be for. "We had this feeling that fiction ought to be good for something," Franzen says. "Basically, we decided it was to combat loneliness." They would talk about lots of Wallace's ideas, which could abruptly sharpen into self-criticism. "I remember this being a frequent topic of conversation," Franzen says, "his notion of not having an authentic self. Of being just quick enough to construct a pleasing self for whomever he was talking to. I see now he wasn't just being funny — there was something genuinely compromised in David. At the time I thought, 'Wow, he's even more self-conscious than I am.' "

Wallace spent a year writing in Syracuse. "I lived in an apartment that was seriously the size of the foyer of an average house. I really liked it. There were so many books, you couldn't move around. When I'd want to write, I'd have to put all the stuff from the desk on the bed, and when I'd want to sleep, I would have to put all the stuff on the desk."

Wallace worked longhand, pages piling up. "You look at the clock and seven hours have passed and your hand is cramped," Wallace said. He'd have pens he considered hot — cheap Bic ballpoints, like batters have bats that are hot. A pen that was hot he called the orgasm pen.

In the summer of 1993, he took an academic job 50 miles from his parents, at Illinois State University at Normal. The book was three-quarters done. Based on the first unruly stack of pages, Nadell had been able to sell it to Little, Brown. He had put his whole life into it — tennis, and depression, and stoner afternoons, and the precipice of rehab, and all the hours spent with Amy watching TV. The plot motor is a movie called Infinite Jest, so soothing and perfect it's impossible to switch off: You watch until you sink into your chair, spill your bladder, starve, die. "If the book's about anything," he said, "it's about the question of why am I watching so much shit? It's not about the shit. It's about me: Why am I doing it? The original title was A Failed Entertainment, and the book is structured as an entertainment that doesn't work" — characters developing and scattering, chapters disordered — "because what entertainment ultimately leads to is 'Infinite Jest,' that's the star it's steering by."

Wallace held classes in his house, students nudging aside books like Compendium of Drug Therapy and The Emergence of the French Art Film, making jokes about Mount Manuscript, David's pile of novel. He had finished and collected the three years of drafts, and finally sat down and typed the whole thing. Wallace didn't really type; he input the giant thing twice, with one finger. "But a really fast finger."

It came to almost 1,700 pages. "I was just terrified how long it would end up being," he said. Wallace told his editor it would be a good beach book, in the sense that people could use it for shade.

It can take a year to edit a book, re-edit it, print it, publicize it, ship it, the writer all the time checking his watch. In the meantime, Wallace turned to nonfiction. Two pieces, published in Harper's, would become some of the most famous pieces of journalism of the past decade and a half.

Colin Harrison, Wallace's editor at Harper's, had the idea to outfit him with a notebook and push him into perfectly American places — the Illinois State Fair, a Caribbean cruise. It would soak up the side of Wallace that was always on, always measuring himself. "There would be Dave the mimic, Dave the people-watcher," Costello says. "Asking him to actually report could get stressful and weird and complicated. Colin had this stroke of genius about what to do with David. It was a much simpler solution than anyone ever thought."

In the pieces, Wallace invented a style writers have plundered for a decade. The unedited camera, the feed before the director in the van starts making choices and cuts. The voice was humane, a big, kind brain tripping over its own lumps. "The Harper's pieces were me peeling back my skull," Wallace said. "You know, welcome to my mind for 20 pages, see through my eyes, here's pretty much all the French curls and crazy circles. The trick was to have it be honest but also interesting — because most of our thoughts aren't all that interesting. To be honest with a motive." He laughed. "There's a certain persona created, that's a little stupider and schmuckier than I am."

The cruise-ship piece ran in January 1996, a month before David's novel was published. People photocopied it, faxed it to each other, read it over the phone. When people tell you they're fans of David Foster Wallace, what they're often telling you is that they've read the cruise-ship piece; Wallace would make it the title essay in his first collection of journalism, A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again. In a way, the difference between the fiction and the nonfiction reads as the difference between Wallace's social self and his private self. The essays were endlessly charming, they were the best friend you'd ever have, spotting everything, whispering jokes, sweeping you past what was irritating or boring or awful in humane style. Wallace's fiction, especially after Infinite Jest, would turn chilly, dark, abstract. You could imagine the author of the fiction sinking into a depression. The nonfiction writer was an impervious sun.

The novel came out in February of 1996. In New York Magazine, Walter Kirn wrote, "The competition has been obliterated. It's as though Paul Bunyan had joined the NFL, or Wittgenstein had gone on Jeopardy! The novel is that colossally disruptive. And that spectacularly good." He was in Newsweek, Time, Hollywood people appeared at his readings, women batted their eyelashes, men in the back rows scowled, envied. A FedEx guy rang his bell, watched David sign for delivery, asked, "How's it feel to be famous?"

At the end of his book tour, I spent a week with David. He talked about the "greasy thrill of fame" and what it might mean to his writing. "When I was 25, I would've given a couple of digits off my non-use hand for this," he said. "I feel good, because I wanna be doing this for 40 more years, you know? So I've got to find some way to enjoy this that doesn't involve getting eaten by it."

He was astonishingly good, quick company, making you feel both wide awake and as if your shoes had been tied together. He'd say things like, "There's good self-consciousness, and then there's toxic, paralyzing, raped-by-psychic-Bedouins self-consciousness." He talked about a kind of shyness that turned social life impossibly complicated. "I think being shy basically means being self-absorbed to the point that it makes it difficult to be around other people. For instance, if I'm hanging out with you, I can't even tell whether I like you or not because I'm too worried about whether you like me."

He said one interviewer had devoted tons of energy to the genius question. "That was his whole thing, 'Are you normal?' 'Are you normal?' I think one of the true ways I've gotten smarter is that I've realized that there are ways other people are a lot smarter than me. My biggest asset as a writer is that I'm pretty much like everybody else. The parts of me that used to think I was different or smarter or whatever almost made me die."

It had been difficult, during the summer, to watch his sister get married. "I'm almost 35. I would like to get married and have kids. I haven't even started to work that shit out yet. I've come close a few times, but I tend to be interested in women that I turn out to not get along very well with. I have friends who say this is something that would be worth looking into with someone that you pay."

Wallace was always dating somebody. "There were a lot of relationships," Amy says. He dated in his imaginative life too: When I visited him, one wall was taped with a giant Alanis Morissette poster. "The Alanis Morissette obsession followed the Melanie Griffith obsession — a six-year obsession," he said. "It was preceded by something that I will tell you I got teased a lot for, which was a terrible Margaret Thatcher obsession. All through college: posters of Margaret Thatcher, and ruminations on Margaret Thatcher. Having her really enjoy something I said, leaning forward and covering my hand with hers."

He tended to date high-strung women — another symptom of his shyness. "Say what you want about them, psychotics tend to make the first move." Owning dogs was less complicated: "You don't get the feeling you're hurting their feelings all the time."

His romantic anxieties were full-spectrum, every bit of the mechanics individually examined. He told me a joke:

What does a writer say after sex?

Was it as good for me as it was for you?

"There is, in writing, a certain blend of sincerity and manipulation, of trying always to gauge what the particular effect of something is gonna be," he said. "It's a very precious asset that really needs to be turned off sometimes. My guess is that writers probably make fun, skilled, satisfactory, and seemingly considerate partners for other people. But that the experience for them is often rather lonely."

One night Wallace met the writer Elizabeth Wurtzel, whose depression memoir, Prozac Nation, had recently been published. She thought he looked scruffy — jeans and the bandanna — and very smart. Another night, Wallace walked her home from a restaurant, sat with her in her lobby, spent some time trying to talk his way upstairs. It charmed Wurtzel: "You know, he might have had this enormous brain, but at the end of the day, he still was a guy."

Wallace and Wurtzel didn't really talk about the personal experience they had in common — depression, a substance history, consultations at McLean — but about their profession, about what to do with fame. Wallace, again, had set impossible standards for himself. "It really disturbed him, the possibility that success could taint you," she recalls. "He was very interested in purity, in the idea of authenticity — the way some people are into the idea of being cool. He had keeping it real down to a science."

When Wallace wrote her, he was still curling through the same topic. "I go through a loop in which I notice all the ways I am self-centered and careerist and not true to standards and values that transcend my own petty interests, and feel like I'm not one of the good ones. But then I countenance the fact that at least here I am worrying about it, noticing all the ways I fall short of integrity, and I imagine that maybe people without any integrity at all don't notice or worry about it; so then I feel better about myself. It's all very confusing. I think I'm very honest and candid, but I'm also proud of how honest and candid I am — so where does that put me?"

Success can be as difficult to recover from as failure. "You know the tic big-league pitchers have," his mother says, "when they know that they've pitched a marvelous game — but gee, can they do it again, so they keep flexing that arm? There was some of that. Where he said, 'OK. Good, that came out well. But can I do it again?' That was the feeling I got. There was always the shadow waiting."

Wallace saw it that way too. "My big worry," he said, "is that this will just up my expectations for myself. And expectations are a very fine line. Up to a certain point they can be motivating, can be kind of a flamethrower held to your ass. Past that point they're toxic and paralyzing. I'm scared that I'll fuck up and plunge into a compressed version of what I went through before."

Mark Costello was also worried. "Work got very hard. He didn't get these gifts from God anymore, he didn't get these six-week periods where he got exactly the 120 pages he needed. So he found distraction in other places." He would get engaged, then unengaged. He would call friends: "Next weekend, Saturday, you gotta be in Rochester, Minnesota, I'm getting married." But then it would be Sunday, or the next week, and he'd have called it off.

"He almost got married a few times," Amy says. "I think what ultimately happened is he was doing it more for the other person than himself. And he realized that wasn't doing the other person any favors."

Wallace told Costello about a woman he had become involved with. "He said, 'She gets mad at me because I never want to leave the house.' 'Honey, let's go to the mall.' 'No, I want to write.' 'But you never do write.' 'But I don't know if I'm going to write. So I have to be here in case it happens.' This went on for years."

In 2000, Wallace wrote a letter to his friend Evan Wright, a Rolling Stone contributor: "I know about still having trouble with relationships. (Boy oh boy, do I.) But coming to enjoy my own company more and more — most of the time. I know about some darkness every day (and some days, it's all dark for me)." He wrote about meeting a woman, having things move too easily, deciding against it. "I think whatever the pull is for me is largely composed of wanting the Big Yes, of wanting someone else to want you (Cheap Trick lives). . . . So now I don't know what to do. Probably nothing, which seems to be the Sign that the universe or its CEO is sending me."

In the summer of 2001, Wallace relocated to Claremont, California, to become the Roy Edward Disney Chair in Creative Writing, at Pomona College. He published stories and essays, but was having trouble with his work. After he reported on John McCain's 2000 presidential campaign for this magazine, he wrote his agent that it would show his editor that "I'm still capable of good work (my own insecurities, I know)."

Wallace had received a MacArthur "genius" award in 1997. "I don't think it did him any favors," says Franzen. "It conferred the mantle of 'genius' on him, which he had of course craved and sought and thought was his due. But I think he felt, 'Now I have to be even smarter.' " In late 2001, Costello called Wallace. "He was talking about how hard the writing was. And I said, lightheartedly, 'Dave, you're a genius.' Meaning, people aren't going to forget about you. You're not going to wind up in a Wendy's. He said, 'All that makes me think is that I've fooled you, too.'"

Wallace met Karen Green a few months after moving to Claremont. Green, a painter, admired David's work. It was a sort of artistic exchange, an inter-disciplinary blind date. "She wanted to do some paintings based on some of David's stories," his mother says. "They had a mutual friend, and she thought she would ask permission."

"He was totally gaga," Wright recalls. "He called, head over heels, he was talking about her as a life-changing event." Franzen met Green the following year. "I felt in about three minutes that he'd finally found somebody who was up to the task of living with Dave. She's beautiful, incredibly strong, and a real grown-up — she had a center that was not about landing the genius Dave Wallace."

They made their debut as a couple with Wallace's parents in July 2003, attending the Maine culinary festival that would provide the title for his last book, Consider the Lobster. "They were both so quick," his father says. "They would get things and look at each other and laugh, without having to say what had struck them as funny." The next year, Wallace and Green flew to his parents' home in Illinois, where they were married two days after Christmas. It was a surprise wedding. David told his mother he wanted to take the family to what he called a "high-gussy" lunch. Sally Wallace assumed it was Karen's influence. "David does not do high gussy," she says. "His notion of high gussy is maybe long pants instead of shorts or a T-shirt with two holes instead of 18." Green and Wallace left the house early to "run errands," while Amy figured out a pretext to get their parents to the courthouse on the way to the lunch. "We went upstairs," Sally says, "and saw Karen with a bouquet, and David dressed up with a flower in his buttonhole, and we knew. He just looked so happy, just radiating happiness." Their reception was at an Urbana restaurant. "As we left in the snow," Sally says, "David and Karen were walking away from us. He wanted us to take pictures, and Jim did. David was jumping in the air and clicking his heels. That became the wedding announcement."

According to Wallace's family and friends, the last six years — until the final one — were the best of his life. The marriage was happy, university life good, Karen and David had two dogs, Warner and Bella, they bought a lovely house. "Dave in a real house," Franzen says, laughing, "with real furniture and real style."

To Franzen's eye, he was watching Wallace grow up. There had been in David a kind of purposeful avoidance of the normal. Once, they'd gone to a literary party in the city. They walked in the front door together, but by the time Franzen got to the kitchen, he realized Wallace had disappeared. "I went back and proceeded to search the whole place," Franzen recalled. "He had walked into the bathroom to lose me, then turned on his heels and walked right back out the front door."

Now, that sort of thing had stopped. "He had reason to hope," Franzen said. "He had the resources to be more grown-up, a wholer person."

And then there were the dogs. "He had a predilection for dogs who'd been abused, and unlikely to find other owners who were going to be patient enough for them," Franzen says. "Whether through a sense of identification or sympathy, he had a very hard time disciplining them. But you couldn't see his attentiveness to the dogs without getting a lump in your throat."

Because Wallace was secure, he began to talk about going off Nardil, the antidepressant he had taken for nearly two decades. The drug had a long list of side effects, including the potential of very high blood pressure. "It had been a fixture of my morbid fear about Dave — that he would not last all that long, with the wear and tear on his heart," Franzen says. "I worried that I was going to lose him in his early 50s." Costello said that Wallace complained the drug made him feel "filtered." "He said, 'I don't want to be on this stuff for the rest of my life.' He wanted to be more a member of the human race."

In June of 2007, Wallace and Green were at an Indian restaurant with David's parents in Claremont. David suddenly felt very sick — intense stomach pains. They stayed with him for days. When he went to doctors, he was told that something he'd eaten might have interacted with the Nardil. They suggested he try going off the drug and seeing if another approach might work.

"So at that point," says his sister Amy, with an edge in her voice, it was determined, 'Oh, well, gosh, we've made so much pharmaceutical progress in the last two decades that I'm sure we can find something that can knock out that pesky depression without all these side effects.' They had no idea that it was the only thing that was keeping him alive."

Wallace would have to taper off the old drug and then taper on to a new one. "He knew it was going to be rough," says Franzen. "But he was feeling like he could finally afford a year to do the job. He figured that he was going to go on to something else, at least temporarily. He was a perfectionist, you know? He wanted to be perfect, and taking Nardil was not perfect."

That summer, David began to phase out the Nardil. His doctors began prescribing other medications, none of which seemed to help. "They could find nothing," his mother says softly. "Nothing." In September, David asked Amy to forgo her annual fall-break visit. He wasn't up to it. By October, his symptoms had become bad enough to send him to the hospital. His parents didn't know what to do. "I started worrying about that," Sally says, "but then it seemed OK." He began to drop weight. By that fall, he looked like a college kid again: longish hair, eyes intense, as if he had just stepped out of an Amherst classroom.

When Amy talked to him on the phone, "sometimes he was his old self," she says. "The worst question you could ask David in the last year was 'how are you?' And it's almost impossible to have a conversation with someone you don't see regularly without that question." Wallace was very honest with her. He'd answer, "I'm not all right. I'm trying to be, but I'm not all right."

Despite his struggle, Wallace managed to keep teaching. He was dedicated to his students: He would write six pages of comments to a short story, joke with his class, fight them to try harder. During office hours, if there was a grammar question he couldn't answer, he'd phone his mother. "He would call me and say, 'Mom, I've got this student right here. Explain to me one more time why this is wrong.' You could hear the student sort of laughing in the background. 'Here's David Foster Wallace calling his mother.' "

In early May, at the end of the school year, he sat down with some graduating seniors from his fiction class at a nearby cafe. Wallace answered their jittery writer's-future questions. "He got choked up at the end," recalls Bennett Sims, one of his students. "He started to tell us how much he would miss us, and he began to cry. And because I had never seen Dave cry, I thought he was just joking. Then, awfully, he sniffled and said, 'Go ahead and laugh — here I am crying — but I really am going to miss all of you.' "

His parents were scheduled to visit the next month. In June, when Sally spoke with her son, he said, "I can't wait, it'll be wonderful, we'll have big fun." The next day, he called and said, "Mom, I have two favors to ask you. Would you please not come?" She said OK. Then Wallace asked, "Would your feelings not be hurt?"

No medications had worked; the depression wouldn't lift. "After this year of absolute hell for David," Sally says, "they decided to go back to the Nardil." The doctors also administered 12 courses of electroconvulsive therapy, waiting for Wallace's medication to become effective. "Twelve," Sally repeats. "Such brutal treatments," Jim says. "It was clear then things were bad."
Wallace had always been terrified of shock therapy. "It scares the shit out of me," he told me in 1996. "My brain's what I've got. But I could see that at a certain point, you might beg for it."

In late June, Franzen, who was in Berlin, grew worried. "I actually woke up one night," he says. "Our communications had a rhythm, and I thought, 'It's been too long since I heard from Dave.' " When Franzen called, Karen said to come immediately: David had tried to kill himself.

Franzen spent a week with Wallace in July. David had dropped 70 pounds in a year. "He was thinner than I'd ever seen him. There was a look in his eyes: terrified, terribly sad, and far away. Still, he was fun to be with, even at 10 percent strength." Franzen would sit with Wallace in the living room and play with the dogs, or step outside with David while he smoked a cigarette. "We argued about stuff. He was doing his usual line about, 'A dog's mouth is practically a disinfectant, it's so clean. Not like human saliva, dog saliva is marvelously germ-resistant.'" Before he left, Wallace thanked him for coming. "I felt grateful that he allowed me to be there," Franzen says.

Six weeks later, Wallace asked his parents to come to California. The Nardil wasn't working. It can happen with an antidepressant; a patient goes off, returns, and the medication has lost its efficacy. Wallace couldn't sleep. He was afraid to leave the house. He asked, "What if I meet one of my students?" "He didn't want anyone to see him the way he was," his father says. "It was just awful to see. If a student saw him, they would have put their arms around him and hugged him, I'm sure."

His parents stayed for 10 days. "He was just desperate," his mother says. "He was afraid it wasn't ever going to work. He was suffering. We just kept holding him, saying if he could just hang on, it would straighten. He was very brave for a very long time."

Wallace and his parents would get up at six in the morning and walk the dogs. They watched DVDs of The Wire, talked. Sally cooked David's favorite dishes, heavy comfort foods — pot pies, casseroles, strawberries in cream. "We kept telling him we were so glad he was alive," his mother recalls. "But my feeling is that, even then, he was leaving the planet. He just couldn't take it."

One afternoon before they left, David was very upset. His mother sat on the floor beside him. "I just rubbed his arm. He said he was glad I was his mom. I told him it was an honor."

At the end of August, Franzen called. All summer long he had been telling David that as bad as things were, they were going to be better, and then he'd be better than he'd ever been. David would say, "Keep talking like that — it's helping." But this time it wasn't helping. "He was far away," Franzen says. A few weeks later, Karen left David alone with the dogs for a few hours. When she came home that night, he had hanged himself.

"I can't get the image out of my head," his sister says. "David and his dogs, and it's dark. I'm sure he kissed them on the mouth, and told them he was sorry."

[From Issue 1064 — October 30, 2008]

 3 ) 越现代越孤单。

    看这片得找一个正确的打开方式。起先我一边在网上聊天一边观看,不断的话唠让人兴味索然。隔天无事,正经的把这片消化掉,意外的感觉到很多来自话唠中的触动。随着网络的延伸,如果你想要,来自互联网的讯息几乎可以告诉你任何你想知道的。这就代表了一种前所未有的境界,人几乎可以和神一样的全知(狭义的理解)。这种优越感左右了我们的情感支配方式,更多时候我们没有察觉自己和上一代的差异,只是简单的理解为代沟,时代进步。实则不然,在讯息时代之前。人在有限的空间里,所做的情感支配,是带着迁就和无选择性的,所以人类显得保守和相对忠诚。而现在的世界,几乎每个人都可以表演自己,主动发现更多的选择性。在无限空间里,得到的越容易失去的也很容易,我们变得个性突出且毫无忠诚。我们的迷失是整个时代的迷失,越现代越孤单。情感这种东西也是没有国界之分的,当自己理解到这种孤单感的原因后,才慢慢理解了作家和他的几乎在矛盾中丧失自我的纠结。

 4 ) 成也孤独,败也孤独

成也孤独,败也孤独

如果说《旅程终点》(The End of the Tour 2015)是一部话唠电影,那它也是一部值得深入思考的话唠电影。在我看来,本片更像是介绍作家戴维(David Foster Wallace)的传记片,它引导我们思考这样的问题:戴维以自己的孤独排解了我们的孤独,为何终究他又选择了死亡?我们不妨依据滚石记者与作家戴维之间的对话来对一问题稍作分析。

如果说一个人选择死亡是因为痛苦,那么,戴维可能是因什么样的痛苦,才走上轻生的道路呢?戴维当年凭他那本畅销书《无尽的玩笑》虽已声名鹊起,但名利并非他写作的主要目的,甚至,巨大名利让他更感到孤独。他把写作比作抚养小孩,必须非常小心,他说:“可以为自己的作品自豪,但期望从中得利就不好了。”利用声名获得利益似乎是一种潜规则,戴维在跟记者初次谈话中就嘲笑了这一点,他开玩笑地说,他很想利用新书巡回宣传吸引女性的投怀送抱,然而,他真实的想法却是“还好,我没这么干,那只会令我感到寂寞”,因为在他看来,别人只是看上了他的声名,而非他的作品和他本人。他不仅不想从自己书籍的成功当中获利,甚至他无法跟任何人分享成功的喜悦,这可能是声名带给他的更大痛苦。

他向记者解释了他想利用声名吸引女性的真实意图:“我只是觉得如果可以跟人分享这些美好的事情会很棒。”然而,他却无法做到这一点,首先,他无法跟普通朋友分享这一切,因为来找他的人都有自己的生活要操心,都是带着目的而来的;其次,他的工作特点让他身边无法留住亲近的人,他的工作特点是写作时需要独处,在他看来,一旦“全情投入”便会有非常强的“自我意识”,这种意识会让任何身边的人成为“被利用的对象”,这不仅让身边的人不能忍受,也是他不愿意去做的。因此,他只能感叹:“如果有个人可以跟你共同生活,分担一切该有多好,无论是开心还是困惑,面对着她你都可以放得开。”可见,有成功却无法与人分享喜悦,应当是他痛苦的一个来源,否则他不会跟记者着重解释这件事。当然,既然喜悦都找不到人分享,那痛苦就更找不到人来分担了。

“成功”无法给他带来快乐,还有一个重要原因是他可能本质上就是个悲观的人。他向记者解释他曾完全迷失在写作当中,因而酗酒、乱性,甚至想到死,然而,当他小说畅销,记者都认为他的新书备受赞誉,非常不赖时,他却说“这是很好,可这是虚幻的。”试想,昔日的龌龊都不足以让他为今天的成功感到喜悦,他那里还能找到幸福呢?

如果说他写作并非为了名利,那他真实目的是什么呢?他跟记者说起他那本畅销书的主题,就是探讨人性的孤独。从这场对话中,我们能够看出,他的痛苦源自他的人文情怀,他那种想为人性孤独提供解决方案的高尚情怀。对于人性孤独,他说“我拿不出一个诊断方案或一套药方来解决”,然而,他又非常担忧技术对人生幸福的不利影响,他认为技术手段如同“打手枪”,偶尔为之会带来欢愉,但决不能长期依赖,技术的进步也绝不是解决人性孤独的良方。可见,人性孤独的问题他已无法解决,如果他是个以解决人类的前途和命运为己任的人,他就注定是孤独而痛苦的。

此外,他的痛苦还来自他注定的“与众不同”。因为他的才华、成就,的确让他显得比别人聪明,在记者看来,他的“交际策略”都利用了他的“聪明”,然而,他不仅不认可这一点,反而说“那让我感到有点孤单”。他这样讲应当是发自内心的,因为他从小就因父母是搞学术的,而使他感到自己与其他同学“格格不入”。他痛恨这种与众不同所带来的孤独感,因为他的信念告诉他,一位优秀的作家必须“珍惜普通人的一面”。他辩驳道:“如果我只扫上一眼,就默认人家没什么见识,或者人家的内在不如我丰富、复杂、嗅觉敏锐,我就不会是这么个好作家。”所以,他认为自己说“只是个普通人”,绝不是一种“惺惺作态”。然而,他又怎么可能成为一个“普通人”呢?正如记者所反驳的,别人啃你一本长达千页的书怎么可能是因为“作者是个普通人”呢?

现实与幻像的反差也是加重他孤独感的一个渊源。虽然他自己有着很强的幻灭感,觉得万事皆空,甚至认为这种幻灭感根植于人性,但他还是在意那些他所批判的幻像,比如影像宣传,他认为这类东西很容易让我们“拐离有意义的人生”,既然一切皆虚幻,又何必太在意呢?一旦在意了,孤独必会如影随形。从他和记者最后的对话中,我们分明能看出这一点:“我必须从这些关注中抽离出来,因为那些关注就像是给你的大脑皮层来了针海洛因,我真正需要勇气的地方是得静坐在那里,承受住这种抽离,并且努力提醒自己什么才是现实。现实就是:我,34岁,独自呆在房间里,面对着一张纸头。”他无法在形形色色的幻象世界中体会快乐,又不愿在冰冷的现实中忍受孤独,这种性格特点就注定了他痛苦人生。

从以上分析可知,他成功无人分享,痛苦无人分担,孤独终究是无法排解的,当他二十来岁时发生过“心灵危机”再次发生时,而恰好此时根深蒂固的幻灭感又占据他整个的心灵时,死亡必然让他感受到是一种解脱。显然,如果说是孤独成就了戴维,也是孤独感最后毁了他,那么,用“成也孤独,败也孤独”来概括戴维的一生应当是恰当的。(文/石板栽花 2015年10月26日)

PS.本文引文源自“酷炫秃顶富二代字幕组” koala676所翻译的字幕,特此志谢!

 5 ) 谈话是人类进步的阶梯

      貌似每一个文青都会梦想着邋里邋遢地坐在电脑前,当一个作家,满世界飞,去签售,去接受敬仰,然后再回到家里,邋里邋遢地随性生活。这只不过是不切实际的幻想而已,而已。并不是有思想的人都能写得一手好文章。个人认为,能够写的好文章的人,并不仅仅要求对生活有细心的观察,还要有那种从正常的生活中短暂地甚至是长时间地抽离的过程。真正看透生活的人,我指的不是那种享受生活的人,而是看透生活的人。并不是每一个看透生活的人都热爱生活,这种人是英雄。也并不是每一个享受生活的人都能够看透生活。能看透生活,不仅仅需要天赋过人,还需要教育和契机。真正看透生活的人,是聪明而敏感的。
     毫无疑问,我认为旅程终点里面的两个作家是看透了生活的人们。他们接受过高等教育,说不定也和家庭的背景有很大的关系,那种潜移默化的指引和教育。他们拥有那种冷眼旁观的态度。他们有那种敏感的心灵。他们有敢于打断别人说话,敢于不掩饰地展示自己的想法的坦荡。他们有从生活中抽离出来的经历。他们惺惺相惜……
      他们惺惺相惜!
      他们知道,这种敏感,聪明的人的生活是不容易的。即使表现地很坚强,生活得很悠闲。正是因为敏感,他们知道人们真正在想什么;正是因为聪明,他们知道人们为什么不在想其他的。这种洞悉人们想法的能力,进一步,这种洞悉生活的能力是恩赐的也是苦恼的。这样的人不好相处,浑身棱角。然而,两个浑身棱角的在一起,虽然有刮蹭,但就是有时候会契合的。会互相指着自己的伤口,然后相视一笑。
      其实,谈话对于普通人是必要的,对于精英,也是必要的。只是每个人对于谈话的期待是不一样的。有时候,我们仅仅是想要让别人知道什么,或者从别人那里了解一些东西。而有时候,我们希望得到和自己水平相当的谈话质量。长时间的得不到这种高质量的谈话,就像是败血症一样,是不健康的心灵和肉体。在这种意义上说,令人愉快的谈话时可遇而不可求的。遇上了,就好好珍惜吧,全神贯注的去谈话吧。在谈话中,我们不仅仅在上传,我们也在下载。一种从未体验过的生活,被以同自己一样的苛刻的方式被审视着,这种惺惺相惜之感是多么能让人会心一笑啊。
       特别喜欢这种话痨的电影,爱在三部曲,年轻气盛,旅程终点。当然是在心情好,平和的时候。哈哈。这种电影有一点好,就是根本没有剧情,所以也就没有什么期待。说不定哪一句话就触动了我的神经。哎,对,就像是随着电影中的人一起对话,不过当然了,看他们的对话以我的水平是不敢妄称相称的,不得不承认,有时候逻辑跟不上了还需要倒回去看。不过我很享受这种过程。就像是在读某一本你根本不会懂的书一样,说不定哪句不着边际的话就击中你了,说不定的。比如这次的旅程终点,小david就为什么自己三十岁不结婚说了说关于婚姻的看法。我觉的就挺对我口味的。他说,结婚的那个人是要在一起三十年四十年的,这就需要那个人能够接受或者包容我的各种状态,生理的,心理的。人们的生活并不是一成不变的,每个人也都在改变着。他说出了,我认为很对的,婚姻的两个要素,包容和改变。只有长时间的相处,在一起生活,才能知道这个女人是否和我相适应。当然了,婚姻这东西是相互的,我也要适应那个女人。但是这是我自己的影评,我想从哪个角度写,我就从哪个角度写,哈哈哈~
      依旧,我还是喜欢话痨片~

 6 ) 就这样错过了2015年最好的电影

如果是在上映的 2015 年看到的《旅行终点》,我会毫不犹豫把它排在这一年所有电影中的第一名。

事实上,即使隔了一年,我也等了很久才鼓起勇气面对它。犹豫可能来自一早得知的结局——大卫·福斯特·华莱士,这个时代最有才华的作家之一,在 2008 年 9 月 12 日选择以自缢的方式离开世界。《旅行终点》的开头,便是杰西·艾森伯格饰演的另外一位作家,曾经采访过华莱士的大卫·利普斯基——又一个大卫——得知华莱士去世的消息,带着难以置信的沉痛表情,在电台里阅读他的作品,重新找出当年的采访录音,回忆起那段短短数日的旅程。

没有太复杂的情节,不过是一位刚刚进入《滚石》工作的年轻作家,突然听到某一位同行被媒体高度赞誉,“明年的各项图书奖都非他莫属了”。他找来那本1000页《无尽的玩笑》,想要亲自验证这一切,结果发现这个第一次听说名字的作者真的如此才华横溢,于是决定去采访他。电影便是整段采访的过程,大卫·利普斯基来到大卫·福斯特·华莱士的家,陪他去图书签售的最后一站,两个大卫在华莱士的家里,学校,路上,明尼苏达州的旅馆、书店,一路的对话。

两个人的聊天很容易变得枯燥或无趣。虽然理查德·林克莱特在他的“爱在”三部曲里给出过正面的示范,但对话的对象换成两个男人,并且没有爱情的起承转合,讨论的话题还是写作、灵感、抑郁、上瘾等等并不那么轻松的话题,会认为它好看的前提,一定是愿意敞开内心的某扇门,通往某些一直隐匿于暗处的灰暗的念想。在采访的一开始,华莱士聊到他名气为他带来的变化,和更多女孩儿们上床的可能,却又让自己感觉像是出来卖的婊子。而在去往签书会的航班上,他第一次谈及曾经的抑郁,28 岁那年,迷失在写作里,那是他唯一能够获得动力的事情,开始酗酒,和陌生人上床,感觉生活在这一年戛然而止。然后看着另外一位更年轻的大卫,回到当下的生活,他说," David, this is nice. This is not real. "

这其实不仅仅是讲述作家以及困扰他的抑郁的电影。从签书会回来,在经历了一次因误会产生的冷战以及关于海洛因的尖锐争论之后,华莱士来到利普斯基的房间,终于,撕开了内心的某道口子,说自己书里写过的一段,一个人从燃烧的摩天大楼跃下时,是因为在更糟糕的选择面前,死亡成了一种解脱。他说感觉一生中听过的每一句话都是错的,自己什么都不是,一切不过是场幻觉。你比别人优秀,因为你已然看穿,你也比别人糟糕,因为你已经没办法正常生活。他说他觉得人是不会变的,那些东西仍旧埋藏在自己的身体内。

大卫·利普斯基躺在床上,眼睛里有什么东西在闪动,我想那是因为我同样感受到的某种刺痛。

“说到根本,华莱士的所有小说写的应该都是这种痛苦。这位早逝的天才作家还曾经说过:小说的作用,就是告诉读者,身为人这种动物,到底是他妈的一种什么滋味儿。”华莱士的作品中文版不多,此前只有过一本短篇小说集《遗忘》和演讲录《生命中最简单又最困难的事》,《无尽的玩笑》简体中文本已经翻译完毕,将于明年出版。上面这段引用,来自书评人比目鱼《刻小说的人》中关于华莱士的一篇。

利普斯基在 2010 年出版了 Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip with David Foster Wallace ,登上了纽约时报畅销书榜,《旅行终点》便来自这本书的改编,在去年也入选了包括《纽约时报》在内的许多媒体的年度最佳电影片单。在两位大卫的作用下,这部电影试着用一段旅程去讲述他们对于名利,对于生死,对于生命的看法和追求。华莱士选择了“不那么糟糕”的死亡,利普斯基滚落的眼泪,却是一种懂得。

电影里,利普斯基犹豫了很久,最后还是把自己的小说 The Art Fair 递给了华莱士,希望得到他的评价,但并没能如愿。结尾时,他在自己的分享会上读起这本非虚构作品的一段,说,当我想起这段旅程,大卫和我坐在他车子的前排,我们都如此年轻,他想要的是比现在拥有的更好的东西,我想要的则是他已经拥有的这些。我们都不知道各自的生活将去往何处,空气中有一股嚼烟叶、可乐、香烟的味道,那些对话是我有过的最棒的对话。大卫认为书的存在是让人忘记孤独,如果可以,我会对他说,那些和他在一起的日子,并没有让我从生活中解脱,而是提醒了我生活应该是什么样子,我会告诉他,那让我感觉不那么孤独了。

镜头留给了正在欢快地跳舞的华莱士,无忧无虑,像个孩子。但你会知道,有些东西,确实从来不曾变过。死亡或许是某种意义上的终点,但它也有更深沉的意义,提醒着我们生命的目的,为此做出的选择,尚未满足的欲望,以及如何了解自己,知道我来过这个世界,我逗留于此是为了什么。

 短评

最让你恐惧的是,你感到你能听懂他说的每句话,你们确凿无疑是同类,经历过同样的痛苦,有过同样的希望。然而他却死了。死于自杀。你还要发现多少次这样失败的证明?你还剩多少次机会证明前无后路,后不见归途?

6分钟前
  • Touma
  • 力荐

David说“You feel like you are so much better than everyone else because you see that all these are delusions. You feel you are so much worse than everyone because you can't fucking function.” 之后脑中一直在回放。再听到他说"I've exhausted all the ways of living." 哭了。

7分钟前
  • fugue
  • 力荐

you're so much better than everybody cause you can see how this is just a delusion and you're so much worse because you can't fucking function...it's really horrible.

12分钟前
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★★★☆不错的话痨片,这样的片子只要遵循对白出色,能催发角色之间的化学反应并适当推动情节就能及格。卷毛演谁都还是卷毛,神经质语速快眼神闪烁表情尴尬,这让席格尔的表演有一种压倒性的出色和可信。说到David F Wallace,很久前想看oblivion和infinite jest,一直没动手,看完电影后是真的好奇了

16分钟前
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聚焦滚石记者对作家Wallace的跟踪采访。本以为会很闷,但通过两人对话,完成对Wallace的内心剖析到主角的自身映射,进而促成两人关系的微妙发展,竟颇有吸引力,每个对话每段冲突都值得细品。当然电影精彩的核心还是Jason Segel对自卑又自我,自闭又渴望陪伴的孤独作家的传神演绎,极具突破,深入人心

20分钟前
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让人很emotional的一部电影抽烟喝酒聊天写作阅读………但愿能够存在于自己的另一个平行宇宙里现实中 没有选择

24分钟前
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3.5 整体不如前作,不过仍然有例如酗酒例如成功与失败等元素和主题,且仍然很善于给电影一个完整且动人的情绪,于是又感同身受了一回。下一部是导演自己编剧的科幻惊悚题材,很期待。

28分钟前
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话唠电影,米国文化人物,也许米国人挺喜欢,但无关人物与剧情,只有对一个米国作家的素描而已。闲的挠墙的人可以看,大家请躲。

31分钟前
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感觉可以作为“如何写机智而自然的人物对话”的教学材料。

35分钟前
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  • 还行

很喜欢这样的话唠片,不过很多句子翻译成中文也会失去那种会心一击的触动。我们总是说人生而孤独,但其实最深的孤独往往来自于永恒的社交。我们说话,只是没有真的说话;我们倾听,只是没有真的倾听;我们相信,只是没有真的相信。关掉影片的那一刻,忽然就想哭了。福斯特说,我感觉我的人生在28岁戛然而止。我的28岁有一半时间活在被疫情困住的愚人节玩笑里。

37分钟前
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滚石记者和大卫·华莱士的公路之旅,这种纯话唠缺剧情的电影真需要倚仗对话的智慧,好在剧本好!相信不仅有原著的功劳,改编者也厉害,编剧好像是个教授... 本是两个作家的对话,却完全不掉书袋,从很普通人的角度入手,慢慢深入。不过华莱士在自杀前的心境,应该和当时有很大不同吧。

42分钟前
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47分钟前
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情节对话据说基本很忠实录音内容,鸡汤不鸡汤的作为一部大众名人电影做的已经足够好了,真实的Literary上的华莱士,就像Jesse片中女友说的得自个儿读才行。Wallace说电视机是他最大的addiction,但即便是这种高度简单化即时娱乐化的影像作品,晚场电影院里也只有四个人观看

52分钟前
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这部电影有意思的是采访者和被采访者的关系:记者觉得自己也是个作家,一直表现出一种不同,而被采访者当然会忍不住的表演,这种关系某种时刻很和谐因为是虚假的。而真实的情况是:双方根本不可能平等。这种虚假被戳穿的时候,是这部电影最好看的一刻。

56分钟前
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片子以对白主导,两个男人的聊天大多数时间很随意,但你一不小心就会被一些小细节击中,比如暗示大卫·华莱士抑郁症的地方,比如人生的孤独,漫不经心的对话,仔细去听了,就很容易感同身受。有些人在生命中虽然只有短暂的交集,但在相交的那个点上,他们知道那一刻彼此不是孤独的。★★★

57分钟前
  • 亵渎电影
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那首big ship真是赞

1小时前
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让人想到林克莱特的几部话唠片。两个作家絮絮叨叨的边走边聊,充满深度的对话就像时断时续的水流,既有尖锐试探又有理解包容。一直觉得卷毛是那种和男星对戏才更有火花的演员~

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"We are both so young. He wants something better than he has. I want precisely what he has already. Neither of us knows where our lives are going to go. It smells like chewing tobacco, soda and smoke."

1小时前
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补标。wallace的孤独和坦白我深深理解,他对生活的悲观见解更是见微知著。毕竟站在长路终点回望,一切都只是无尽的玩笑。

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让我难过一会,"This idea that if i could just achieve X and Y and Z, that everything would be okay. "

1小时前
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