Laurence Etling: Radio in the Movies: A History and Filmography, 1926-2010.
Chan, Chris
Laurence Etling
Radio in the Movies: A History and Filmography, 1926-2010
Foreword by Kenneth Jurkiewicz
McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. 230 pages. Paperback
$45.00.
Radio in the Movies: A History and Filmography, 1926-2010 is a
history of how radio broadcasts have been depicted on film. The
combination of two forms of media is a fascinating topic, and many
intriguing essays could be written about how the radio has been
incorporated into movie plotlines. Radio in the Movies is a useful
reference guide for anyone interested in cinematic portrayals of the
radio, but despite its promise, it lacks sufficient insight into the
nature of the medium or the quality of the radio-themed movies to be
truly engaging.
The book is full of information, but it could use a great deal more
critical analysis of its subject matter. One of the work's major
disappointments is that there seems to be no correlation between the
role that radio plays in a movie and the amount of space Etling grants
it. A few hundred movies are mentioned in the text, and most of them
only receive a sentence or two briefly describing the film. Sometimes a
movie has but a single brief scene involving a sports announcer
discussing an event over the air, yet it receives nearly a page of text.
In fact, while Etling might spend a couple of paragraphs on movies
containing an extremely minor subplot revolving around the radio, he
largely ignores movies in which the radio plays a far more prominent
role. In recent years, there have been several high-profile movies
centered on the radio, namely Robert Altman's A Prairie Home
Companion and the Oscar-winner for Best Picture in 2010, The King's
Speech. A Prairie Home Companion is referenced on the back cover and
both movies are listed in an index at the end of the book, but neither
is ever mentioned in the text. There are also a handful of factual
errors in the text. Don Cheadle is described as an Oscar winner for
Hotel Rwanda, but though he was nominated, he did not win. Also, the
Whoopi Goldberg movie Eddie (1996) is said to have been released a
decade before it actually was.
My focus on the book's shortcomings should not obscure the
fact that Etling's work provides a comprehensive overview of the
role that the radio has played in the cinema over the past several
decades. Yet he does very little to tie the summaries together, and that
gives the text a highly episodic feel, as the focus shifts from one
movie to another every few sentences.
The book is divided into six chapters, each covering a different
recurring theme in radio-centric movies. Perhaps the most intriguing
chapter subject is "Play 'Misty' for Me: Psychos on the
Air," which focuses on a combination of unhinged disc jockeys and
deranged fans. One of Etling's most insightful passages appears in
this chapter, where he writes:
If, as discussed in Chapter Two, movies are to a degree a
reflection of the times in which they are produced, then
Hollywood's depictions of the radio world in recent years would be
somewhat unsettling. First, it would appear that much of America,
or at least that segment that listens to and calls talk radios, has
relationship issues. Many of these seem to be of a sexual nature,
and those calling talk shows about their personal situations often
appear to have additional psychological and sociological problems,
not the least of which is a frequent propensity to engage in some
kind of violent behavior. Listeners displaying a variety of deviant
personality traits have been common in the radio films of the past
four decades. (152)
Were the book filled with paragraphs like this, which addresses how
radio in films might mirror broader societal evils, then the book might
have been a treasure. As it stands, the reader is left wanting to know a
lot more about the movies alluded to in this book, what Etling thinks of
them, and what they have to say about American society.
Chris Chan
Marquette University