Freddy`s Revenge Author(s): Fred Krueger
Transcription
Freddy`s Revenge Author(s): Fred Krueger
Freddy's Revenge Author(s): Fred Krueger-Pelka Source: The Threepenny Review, No. 41 (Spring, 1990), pp. 17-18 Published by: Threepenny Review Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4383865 Accessed: 05-09-2015 18:00 UTC Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/ info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. Threepenny Review is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Threepenny Review. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 158.121.247.60 on Sat, 05 Sep 2015 18:00:29 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions MEMOIR Freddy'sRevenge Fred Krueger-Pelka MAGINE WAKING one morning to discover you have been renamed Count Dracula. Think of the effect this might have on your social and professional life. For four years I lived with just this sort of bizarre double identity, sharing my name with a famous fictional character. To my friends I was a mildmannered freelance writer, plying my words, staying one step ahead of my creditors and the IRS. But to millions more I was a psychotic misogynist, a vicious child molester who had risen from the grave to mutilate and murder, targeting teenaged girls as my victims of choice. My name was Fred Krueger, though most who knew me as a psychopath preferredto call me Freddy. For those of you who don't follow the slice-'em dice-'em scene, Freddy Krueger is the leading character in a series of popular slasher flicks, the first of which was A Nightmare on Elm Street. It is an astonishingly successful batch of movies, the original 1985 production and its three sequels (Freddy's Revenge, 1986; The Dream Warriors, 1987; and The Dream Master, 1988) grossing more than fifty million dollars in VCR sales and rentals alone. Freddy Krueger is the mutilated, undead spirit of a child-murdering pervert, burned to death by angry homeowners on suburban Elm Street, lo so many years ago. But, as the movie ads gloat, Freddy's back! stalking the nightmares of nubile teenagers, carving them up with the razors he keeps strapped to the fingers of his right hand. It's difficult to account for Freddy's popularity, given his line of work. There are Freddy KruegerT shirts and Freddy Krueger posters, his face leering through layers of polyurethane scar tissue, the glinting razors on his hand curling like a mandarin's fingernails. Disc jockeys and comedians do impersonations of the mad slasher, and I've seen small children pretending to flail Freddy's razors at each other's faces and throats. Freddy has been featured on the cover of The National Enquirer, and now there is even a television series, Freddy's Nightmares, out in syndication. Freddy Kruegerhas become, in the words of Boston Globe movie critic Betsy Sherman, "the definitive villain of the '80s." What does it mean, I wonder, that a child molester has been elevated to the status of pop hero? And isn't it strange, the power of names, those puffs of air we use to identify ourselves? 'D HAD problems with my name before. For one thing, editors always seemed to have trouble remembering to insert the first "e" after the "u" in Krueger. Several of my articles have appeared under this mistaken by-line. But even when spelled correctly, the name seemed to me harsh, abrasive. And then there were Krugerrands, the South African gold coins. I can recall marching in an anti-apartheid rally, chanting, "Freedom yes, apartheid no, Krugerrand has got to go," half wondering who it was they wanted me to leave with. But none of this compared with the grief I ran into after the advent of Freddy Krueger, bad dresser, child molester. I remember taking one of my articles to the editor of a now defunct Boston publication. "Fred Krueger," he said, flipping through the piece. "Hey, aren't you the guy who runs around mutilating little girls?" Then there were the people who assumed I was joking. Nobody could really be named Fred Krueger.Silly as it sounds, this became a problem, since as a reporter I might make a dozen phone calls on any given day. On several occasions people I needed to interview simply hung up, assuming I was playing some sort of obscene joke. Hi, I'm Fred Krueger.Yeah.Sure. If I responded to any of this with anything but a polite denial ("No, I'm really not a child molester"), or a good natured chuckle, I was told that I was thin-skinned, over-reacting. After all, it was nothing personal. Just a joke about my name, is all. The decision to actually change my name came during a visit to see my doctor. He had scheduled me for a biopsy, because there was a suspicion I might have cancer. Arriving at his office, I was understandably preoccupied with what might happen if the test results turned out, to use his turn of phrase, "positive." I hardly noticed the expression on the receptionist's face when I handed her my clinic card. "Oooh," she crooned, as if I were a cross between Michael Jackson and Charlie Manson. "Hey, everybody,it's Freddy Krueger!" Poetry Workshopswith Carolyn Forche, Charles Simic, Linda Gregg Guest Poets: Derek Walcott, Michael Pettit, Dara Wier FictionWorkshopswith James Welch, Kate Braverman, Al Young Guest Author:Alice Adams Non-FictionWorkshopswith Geoffrey Wolff, memoir& biography Cyra McFadden, creative journalism Guest: Bruce Berger, TheTellingDistance Mark Medoff, Playwriting (Childrenof a LesserGod) Tracy Wynn, Screenwriting (TheDeep, TheLongestYard) Guest: Lorenzo Semple, Jr. (ThreeDaysof the Condor) Suddenly,a whole waiting room full of people was staring at me, some in amusement, some in curiosity or incomprehension, and one or two in what seemed like genuine fear.When I told the receptionist I didn't appreciate this sort of attention at a time like this, she replied, "Oh, I'm just having a little fun. My last name is Hubbard. Everybody always calls me 'Mother Hubbard."' T some consolation in I wasn't alone in my knowing isonymic situation, that this sort of coincidence must happen all the time. There are, after all, only so many names to go around, and fictitious characters, even the monsters, have to be named something.The Beatles,for example, chose the title for their song "Eleanor Rigby" by flipping through the London phonebook until they found a euphonious name with the right number of syllables. My tenth grade math teacher was named Charlie Brown, while a friend of mine in college had the moniker John Thomas, used by D.H. Lawrence in Lady Chatterley's Lover as a euphemism for the male organ. Another friend of mine endured a similar, though less benign, experience. Barbara was ten years old, and living in California, when her family became suddenly, incredibly famous. That day, and for weeks afterward, dozens of strangers telephoned their home, screaming obscenities. Barbara's classmates took to following her around the schoolyard, pretending to shoot her in the head. This harassment, which continued until she was well into high school, began November 22, 1963, but even today Barbara suffers jokes or comments about her "peculiar" last HERE WAS ASPEN WRITERS' CONFEREN JULY 15-28, 1990 Join us for a celebration of writing in the heart of the Rockies For more informationand brochure,please contact: Kurt Brown, Director ASPEN WRITERS' CONFERENCE P.O. Drawer 7726 Colorado 81612? 303/923-4144 Aspen, A programof the Aspen Writers' Foundation Sponsoredby The Aspen Foundation Aspen/SnowmassArts Council City of Aspen Colorado Councilon the Arts and Humanities Plus InternationalGuests Publisher:Scott Walker (Graywolf) Poet Herman de Coninck, Belgium Novelist Catherine Lim, Singapore Editor: Gordon Lish (Knopf) Agent: Margaret Ruley (JaneRotrosenAgency) SPRING 1990 17 This content downloaded from 158.121.247.60 on Sat, 05 Sep 2015 18:00:29 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions name, which is Oswald, absolutely no relation to Lee Harvey. And because Freddy Krueger is arguably better known today, especially among ten- to twenty-year-olds, than Lee Harvey Oswald, I began receiving some pretty strange calls myself. There was, for instance, the woman who phoned at two o'clock one Easter morning, to deliver what she told me was a message from God. "Rapist scum!" she screamed, "apartheid rapist pig! Die Freddy die!" She called at least a dozen times that night, with variations on the same theme. Her last ten messages were recorded on my apartheid rapist answering machine. Allen Ginsberg has described fame as "a koan," "a mystical riddle of identity, to move through continuously and solve in different ways." As I encountered, more and more often, adherents of the cult of Freddy Krueger, I felt caught in some kind of "mystical riddle" myself, a cosmic joke I had to puzzle through on the way to deciphering my own true identity. I came to realize how closely this identity was linked, in ways both obvious and mysterious, to what people called me, to what I called myself. I was Fred Krueger. That's who I'd been since before I could remember. It was the name printed on my birth certificate, inscribed on my father's tombstone. It had been a part of me through every instant of my waking life. N HAVE been recognized throughout history as powerful talismans. So sacred was the name of God to the ancient Hebrews, and so powerful its properties, that its pronunciation was held a secret, accessible only to the purified. The stricture against writing the full name of God was absolute, so that today we can only approximatethe actual Hebrew word for "Jahweh." "In the mystical disciplines of the Indian Tantric tradition," writes Joseph Campbell, in the first volume of his tetralogy The Masks of God, "the pronunciation of the name of any god will cause him to appear and his force to operate, since tI e name is the audible form of the god himself." In many cultures people keep their true name a secret, known only to themselves, their priest, and God. The Papuans in the South Pacific believe a person's inner qualities, even his guilt or innocence of a particular crime, can be discerned by the pronunciation of his name. Westernersshare this belief in the power of names. Consider all the authors, actors, and celebrities who've changed their names, from Voltaire, Moliere, and Mark Twain, down through John Wayne, Bob Dylan, and Gary Hart. There are even instances when a change of name may well have changed the course of history. William Shirer,in The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, notes that Hitler's original family name was Schicklgruber, changed by his father Alois before the dictator's birth. "Can one imagine," Shirer asks, "the frenzied German masses acclaiming a Schicklgruber with their thunderous 'heils?' 'Heil Schicklgruber?'" "A man's name," said psychologist Herbert Silberer, in his 1913 article, "Mench und Name," "is like a shadow ... it follows him all his life." But after Nightmare I saw myself trailing two shadows. The larger shadow meant that my name rarely appeared in print unless preceded-by such honorifics as "the horrible," "the hideous," or (my favorite) "uncontrollably evil." This was often accompanied by a publicity photo: battered tramp's hat, hideous face, malevolent smile, blood-washed razors. Obviously people, strange people, were getting some strange ideas about me. My Easter morning messenger was evidence enough of that. I thought of all the dysfunctional souls out there, with deadly fantasies waiting to be triggered by one of the "big names" of pop culture. John Hinckley credits the mpyieTaxi Driver with driving the last semblance of sanity from his mind. Charlie Manson heard a Beatles song as incitement to butcher movie stars and precipitate a race war. Even a book as wistful as The Catcher in the Rye was read by Mark David Chapman as a treatise on assassination. "From Holden Caulfield, to Holden Caulfield, this is my statement," is how Chapman inscribed his copy of the book, the night he murdered John Lennon. What sort Freddy the K., free of charge, when Fox Television in Boston broadcast Nightmare as an "Eight O'Clock Prime Movie." Critics consider A Nightmare on Elm Street to be something of a slasher masterpiece. The special effects are indeed incredible, and the film's creator, Wes Craven, is a recognized master of the genre, using especially the threat of mutilation, and the suggestion of rape, to powerful effect. There is, for example, the scene where the unsuspecting teenaged heroine, played by Heather Langenkamp, dozes in her bath, while Freddy's razor-extended fingers rise from the steamy water between her legs. We are treated to numerous scenes of girls in nightgowns stalked down dim-lit alleys, or through the bowels of some hulking, nightmare factory. And of course there is the obligatory girl in white panties scene, de rigueur for any self-respecting slasher flick. Predictably enough, Langenkamp manages to elude Freddy because she has resisted the entreaties of her date, I;???; ::????1,:::::; ii: df Boston police have filed child abuseand neglect charges against the parents of a 5-year-oldboy who stabbeda two-and-ahalf-year-oldgirl 17 times after watching two horrorfilms. A witnesstold police that shortlybefore the stabbing, the boy had been talking about the movies 'Fridaythe 13th' and 'A Nightmareon ElmStreet.' :?c?:-??i ,:?: -;;:?.??? .:?::::: I:P I:W ::::S;B:j#i': 1:111-::::::: ;-'::?: i:i:aa:: ::I rx: :? AMES jj:411:I:I:::::: ?:-:?I-:.?.:-:?:-:::i-:::;:::::::::: :::-r i:: iiliilliiiiiri: -?-:?:-: :?:-:I:l:i:::::::::i:::i:I::i:.?l:l *i ::I :::::?:?:-:::: :-??:::::::::.:I::I::._:::_ R :? B : :?: : : :i -D :':::':: :::i: :ra ::::::::: Xb icJ YeatsIrishMask of imagination, what sort of "statement," might be inspired by the uncontrollably evil Freddy Krueger? "Wouldn't it be strange," a friend of mine suggested, "if some lunatic tracked you down and killed you, because he thought you were the real Freddy Krueger?" "But," I replied, "I am the real Freddy Krueger." to meet my alter-ego for years, but recoiled at the thought of paying to see A Nightmare on Elm Street. I've always detested slasher flicks, even before my name was coopted. Their plots, from Nightmare to Halloween to Friday the 13th parts one through infinity,seem always to hinge on violent retribution being visited upon sexually active teenagers. Sex always equals death in the world of these movies, and girls who aren't virgins deserve mutilation. It's no wonder that these films are so popular, in an age of TV evangelists, STDs, and "just say no." "In Western society," says Diana E. H. Russell, in her book, The Politics of Rape, "there are still 'good girls' and 'bad girls', virgins and whores...because a whore is seen as 'bad,' conscience can be suspended." I finally got my chance to meet 'D WANTED as the personification of the fears of many child survivors of actual sexual violence, his message to them being: you can run but you can't hide. And those recurring nightmares you have are just the avenue by which your attacker will make his return. Some media critics contend that films like Nightmare desensitize their audience to the pain of violence, especially sexual violence. And studies by psychologists at several universities indicate that viewers of slasher flicks tend to more readily accept the common myths about rape: that rape isn't traumatic, that women enjoy being raped. I thought it interesting, then, that twice during its telecast of Nightmare Fox TV ran a public service announcement with the earnest message: "Violence against women: it's criminal." Possibly the station managers were concerned about the film's impact on their audience. Or perhaps it's just that somebody at Fox TV has a very wry sense of humor. In any event, if the purpose of running the announcement was to guard against someone taking Freddy's pastime to heart, in one case at least it appears to have failed. This item appeared in the Boston Globe several days after Nightmare was aired: who tries seducing her at the beginning of the movie. Heather's promiscuous girlfriend,on the other hand, is chopped into giblets almost immediately after having sex with her boyfriend. She is "the whore" to Langenkamp's "virgin," which supposedly allows us to enjoy her horrible death without any uncomfortable feelings of guilt. This link between sex, violence, and death is hardly new. Susan Sontag, in her essay "The Pornographic Imagination," notes that "it's toward the gratifications of death, succeeding and surpassing those of eros, that every truly obscene quest tends." What violent pornography, such as the writings of DeSade and Bataille, or The Story of 0, "exposes in extreme erotic experience is its subterranean connection with death." But there are themes developed in slasher flicks which may well be unique to the genre. There is in Nightmare, for example, the conceit of the resurrected child murderer, a sort of Bizarro Jesus Christ, risen from the grave to exact vengeance on those who did him in. This is as much an intriguing coincidence as it is powerful myth-making, since pedophiles often threaten death or mutilation to keep their victims quiet. Freddy Kruegercan be seen, then, FOR ALL its significance, I found it remarkably easy to change my name. I had to file a petition at the county probate court, advertise the proposed change in a local newspaper, and then appear before a judge. Altogether, the process took only three months and cost less than seventy dollars. And watching the crowd in the corridor outside the courtroom put my troubles into perspective, when I considered that no one was suing, divorcing, or indicting me, at least not yet. There are times, though, when I almost regret the change. It was my name, after all. Abandoning it after all these years felt something like betraying an intimate friend. And if I was ambivalent about that name, well, sometimes I'm ambivalent about myself. Here again, the name was somehow linked to the reality. But my new name has brought with it plenty of consolations. Months after the change I still get a surreptitious little thrill, every time I introduce myself, write a check, or sign my new moniker, as if I'm some holdover from the Weather Underground. And it's such a relief not to be on the receiving end of so much strange noise. It's been months now since anyone hung up on me, much less threatened my life. And I no longer flinch every time I'm asked to introduce myself, or produce ID at a bank, hospital, or bar. For a while I even considered changing my first name. What the hell, I thought, in for a penny, in for a pound. But researching it, I discovered that "Friedreich," from which "Fred" is derived, is German for "peaceful ruler," or "peaceable kingdom." I figure I can live with that.O THETHE THREEPENNY REVIEW 18 This content downloaded from 158.121.247.60 on Sat, 05 Sep 2015 18:00:29 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions