The People Of The Wind, IV.
In this post, we revisit one of my combox contentions. Over dinner, Eve Davisson tells Philippe Rochefort:
"'I shan't join the demonstrators, whatever some of my friends may say when they learn I've been out with an Imperial officer.'" (p. 488)
In any film adaptation, between Rochefort in space and Rochefort in the restaurant, we should see brief highlights of a demonstration:
a large crowd gathers, comprising smaller groups unfurling banners and raising placards;
they march through Fleurville, flanked by stewards identified by arm bands or coloured jackets;
not military ranks but a crowd flowing like a river;
individuals with megaphones lead chants;
different sections of the march display and chant different slogans like "Peace Now!," "Down with the Empire!," "No to Terra!"; "All Beings are Brothers!," "Friendship with Ythri!";
some peel off to crowd into coffee shops, then re-join the march;
on-lookers include pro-Imperial counter-demonstrators with placards;
police separate opposed factions;
police challenge some slogans as illegal;
there are some arrests;
an equivalent of a TV crew interviews individuals;
marchers ignore a lone preacher on a soapbox;
the gathering and march are filmed with a hand held camera carried between the actors and extras so that the cinema audience gets a sense of what it is like to be surrounded by the demonstration, not just of viewing it from the outside;
the march ends with a rally in a square near Parliament with speakers on a platform;
speakers include well-known politicians and campaign leaders;
some marchers are still arriving during the speeches whereas large numbers are already leaving to rendezvous with their transport back to other parts of Esperance;
some individuals and groups are content to have marched and not to have heard any speeches;
leaflets are distributed;
most leaflets directly address current politics but there will be alternatives like "Find Peace Through Jesus" or "Support (some sectarian leader that no one has ever heard of)";
alternative newspapers are sold or handed out free;
some queue to sign a petition to the Emperor;
money is collected for march expenses and for related causes;
if there are Krishna Consciousness devotees on Esperance, then they hand out free vegetarian curries (atheists do not refuse free food; Muslims might refuse food that has been offered to an idol);
an individual following a banner tries to move forward through the crowd but is held up by a seemingly endless line of people walking at right angles to his proposed path;
people use mobile phones to re-establish contact with groups from which they have been separated or to ask where their transport pick-up point is;
an ambulance has to be summoned to someone who has fainted;
the antigrav alternatives to helicopters hover overhead.
You might guess that I write from experience. A short scene in a film cannot possibly show everything that I have listed in any detail. However, an attempt to flicker very quickly through many such sub-scenes would generate a confusing impression of a large public event and would give some context to Eve's remark to Rochefort.
6 comments:
I have attended few demonstrations.
At one there were speeches that I could catch very little of, which led me to wonder "How many of the people attending actually *heard* Martin Luther King's 'I have a dream' speech."
Jim,
Good question. Most people present know in general what is going to be said anyway.
Famously, anti-fascists blocked a route and prevented the British Union of Fascists from marching through a Jewish area of London. A guy who was there said, "What did I see in Cable St? The backs of other people's heads. How did I learn that we stopped the fascists? I read it in the papers the following day!" A guy who was there knew what had happened the same way you and I do, by reading about it afterwards.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
Nicely written. I do have some doubts that any filmed version of THE PEOPLE OF THE WIND would show such a demonstration in so much detail, because it would be too lengthy.
And not all beings can or will be brothers. My view remains that of Max Abrams.
Ad astra! Sean
Sean,
I agree that what I described would be far too lengthy for its purpose in the film. The film makers might have to produce an extended piece of drama but then show only a few very brief extracts, the most dramatic, noisy and colourful.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
That is what would most likely be done. Some pro-Imperial demonstrators, including victims of those "bloody clashes, might burn effigies of Ythrians!
Ad astra! Sean
Oh, yes.
Post a Comment