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Throat Sprockets (Cutting Edge)

de Tim Lucas

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Can the person-centred approach work in time-limited counselling and psychotherapy? This is a question that many practitioners grapple with as demand for brief therapy increases - particularly in the public sector. This title tackles this subject.
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"A city without theaters is a guilty city…"

My review of Throat Sprockets deserves a disclaimer of sorts. Before reading Tim Lucas’ debut novel, I always already familiar with the author through his work on the publication Video Watchdog, a semi-obscure magazine dedicated to obscure cinema that – in an age before DVDs and streaming downloads – could even be considered underground. Dismissive of mainstream films and obsessive over frame rates and screen ratios, Video Watchdog catered to a subculture of cinema junkies that preferred their films scratchy, subtitled, and subversive. It was a fan-based movement where exploitation flicks mingled with avant-garde cinema, and while I would later abandon Video Watchdog due to its dogmatic rejection of anything even remotely mainstream, it was a culture I was very much a part of, and an experience that informed much of my current attitude towards film. Because of my background with both the author of the book and its subject matter, my reaction and interpretation of Throat Sprockets is - to say the least – biased, and so the work may touch me in ways that others can’t perceive. As they say, you don’t have to be crazy to work here, but it helps. Nevertheless…

While the novel indeed explores the existential boundaries of love, devotion, and loss, it is above all else a love letter to those obsessed with film. In fact, the books overall themes of love, obsession, loss, and cinema are neatly foreshadowed in the book’s opening sentence:

"The first time I saw Throat Sprockets was at the old Eros Theater; it’s long gone, but I visit it often in memory."

This is no accident, as Lucas’ expertly crafted prose proves throughout the novel; like a director creating layers of meaning and subtext with a single camera move, Lucas injects depth and introspection into his masterful use of language that often borders on poetry. In a way, Lucas often appears to successfully translate the visual language of cinema onto the page, if such a thing is even possible.

The main story of the novel follows an unnamed narrator whose (flashback to Video Watchdog) disdain for mainstream cinema drives to inhabit porn grindhouses, where he first views the film that alters the course of his life, the titular Throat Sprockets. His eventual obsession with the film’s subject matter, while containing other subtexts, mirrors the horror film subculture that both thrived and met with societal backlash through the eighties into the nineties. Much like Throat Sprockets, the horror film fan base grew exponentially when specialty theaters gave way to the video age, and the narrator’s story of tracking down his obscure cinematic obsession directly references many of the same pathways and hurdles I personally experienced as a horror film fan during that age, including video rental stores, foreign imports, alternate versions (a regular staple of Video Watchdog), and the bootleg video market – anybody who ever purchased a fourth-generation dup from Video Search of Miami will relate to the narrator’s dealings with hardcore bootlegger Paul Hood. Even the conservative assault on horror films and their fans is represented with a talk show scene that blatantly mimics The Morton Downy Jr. Show. There are other indirect topical references to the period in which the book was written and takes place, such as this thinly-veiled critique of Pretty Woman:

"There I watched, and he slept through, My Fair Hooker (at least that’s what it should have been called), an overbudgeted trifle starring one of the most grating actresses I’ve ever seen."

Not all of Lucas’ topical references are nostalgic in nature; one line in particular, meant to gauge a discontent with political affairs at the time, haunted me when I read it twenty-five years after its 1992 publication:

"…I yearn for my country, where a failed educational system has undermined the reliability of majority rule and made elections a dangerous farce, where people persist in looking for easy answers in a gridlock of gunmetal and bureaucracy…"

Of course, there is so much more going on in Throat Sprockets than film fanaticism. The narrator’s fascination with the film opens the doors to fetishism, societal disassociation, romantic longing and confusion, perversion, and all sorts of fun existential dilemmas. However, it is a film-lover’s surreal dementia through which these aspects are filtered, and it is that metaphor for the eternal search for a meaning to reality in the fabricated realm of forbidden entertainment which speaks deeply to my past participation in that misunderstood counter-culture (hence my opening disclaimer). However, you don’t need to be a member of the splatterpunk movement or Video Watchdog crowd to understand or connect with this novel, as Lucas’ Throat Sprockets – much like the novel’s cinematic namesake - easily transcends the source material, and imbues the audience with an unquenchable thirst. ( )
  smichaelwilson | Oct 29, 2017 |
Perverted and delicious in all the right ways. ( )
1 vote morbusiff | May 9, 2013 |
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The first time I saw Throat Sprockets was at the old Eros theater; it's long gone, but I visit it often in memory.
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Can the person-centred approach work in time-limited counselling and psychotherapy? This is a question that many practitioners grapple with as demand for brief therapy increases - particularly in the public sector. This title tackles this subject.

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