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By Chris Wiggum
Unemployed?
Tired of sitting around at home searching for jobs all day? Go see
a movie, but dont expect to get much help finding a job from
the big screen, says Richard Bolles, job-hunting guru, author of
the hugely successful What Color Is Your Parachute? and San
Francisco Film Society member for the past eight years.
Bolles
feels that movies portray job searching in an unrealistic way. The
best thing that job seekers can get from the movies is a means to
relax in what can be a stressful endeavor, he says. "Movies
make people laugh. Theyre entertaining. Just laughing will
probably help more than anything."
This
is good advice from someone who has made a career of giving career
advice. An ordained Episcopal priest (he went to every screening
of Kieslowskis religious-themed The Decalogue when
the Festival showed it in 1990), Bolles wrote Parachute in
1970 after losing his job as canon pastor at Grace Cathedral in
San Francisco. Noticing fellow ministers that were also doubtful
about the stability of their positions, he crafted a 168- page treatise
on job switching and procurement. Although the book contained no
discourse on film, he maintains that movies have always been crucial
in forming his perceptions of the world. He views films as metaphors
for everyday life, and from them culls necessary lessons regarding
human interaction. Bolles puts it plainly: "My other language
is movies."
Bolles
says that seeing Errol Flynn in Michael Curtiz The Adventures
of Robin Hood in 1938 was such a powerful moviegoing experience
that it instilled in him an early fascination with film. Indeed,
his childlike awe of the cinematic experience continued, and he
collected, like so many film buffs do, vivid recollections of the
indelible images he came across. He recalls seeing Raoul Walshs
Objective, Burma! in 1945 (another Errol Flynn vehicle) on
his 18th birthday. "I can tell you exactly where I sat: the
balcony!" he exclaimed. "I can tell you exactly what was
on the screen at the time we walked in: It was a terrible storm!"
I
asked what films in todays stormy economy he would offer up
as recommended viewing for the unemployed. Bolles, who loves foreign
movies, named a couple of recent imports: Amélie,
from France, and Swedens Under the Sun. "Go see
movies that are entertaining," he added. "Theres
nothing wrong with fluff."
Bolles
has tried to see two or three films a week since he was 18, the
kind of prodigious moviegoing in which one is sure to run across
much more than just fluff. "I prefer movies that exhibit a
little intelligence," he says, citing two Davids, Mamet and
Lynch, as directors that he particularly admires, although the ability
to tackle a diverse range of subjects in film is something he finds
important. "Ive seen [Mamets] State and Main
probably seven times. I like it because hes not up to his
usual tricks. It shows he can do something different."
I
assumed that over the course of his long and distinguished career,
Bolles had probably had a few first-hand encounters with some of
his favorite directors or actors. To my surprise, he said he hadnt.
"I did stand two feet from Sophia Loren once," he said.
"I couldnt believe how small she looked."
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