[One of the best
parts of my 2018 so far has been discovering SundanceTV’s Hap & Leonard. Based on the
series of novels
by Joe Lansdale, and starring James Purefoy and Michael K.
Williams, the series has completed two wonderful 6-episode seasons and as I
write this is in the midst of Season 3. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a
handful of Hap & Leonard contexts,
leading to a special weekend post on the unique career to date of Michael K.
Williams!]
On a mythic and
a very real context for the show’s Season 3 opening.
As I mentioned
in yesterday’s post, at the time of writing this week’s series I’ve only seen
the first two episodes of Season 3 (they will all have aired, and perhaps even
will be on Netflix, by the
time this post appears). But even without the full context of the season, I was
immediately struck by the bravura Season 3 opening sequence, an East Texas retelling
of the legend
of blues great Robert Johnson and the
Devil. In Hap & Leonard’s
version (narrated by a mysterious African American girl), it’s young African
American blues musician L.C. Soothe who meets the Devil at an eerie crossroads
(indeed, who performed a ceremony to summon the Devil) and sells his soul to
become the world’s greatest blues guitarist. Soothe achieves his goal and for a
time all is ideal, but the Devil is simply waiting for his moment, and in the
sequence’s closing moments he arrives, bringing the Ku Klux Klan with him, to
end Soothe’s story tragically and brutally.
As I understand
it, the Hap & Leonard books (which I haven’t had the chance to check out
yet) consistently feature supernatural and even horror threads. But I wouldn’t
say such elements or genres have been much a part of the show’s Seasons 1 and
2, and so this Season 3 opening sequence signals a distinct addition to the
series. Yet at the same time, I would argue that the Devil
and Robert Johnson story is less supernatural or horror and more folklore, a mythic storytelling
embodiment of various regional, cultural, and historical traditions and themes.
As such, the L.C. Soothe and the Devil sequence sets up Season 3 to feature
such a folkloric side, a storytelling style and tone that asks us to view what
we’re seeing as at least partly symbolic and legendary. That we will apparently
spend much of the season not in Hap and Leonard’s by now familiar hometown of
LaBorde but in Grovetown, a very distinct community with a mythic and sinister
quality all its own, only heightens that sense that this season we are entering
a folkloric story and world.
Yet I would also
argue that it’s crucial that the L.C. Soothe story ends with the Devil allied
with the Ku Klux Klan, and that we’re told repeatedly that Grovetown is one
place in the region where the Klan are still present and active (paying off the
final image of Season 2, that of Klan robes and hoods drying on a laundry line).
Whatever else Hap & Leonard is
(and it’s many things, as I hope this week’s series illustrates), it has from
the first season on been a work of historical fiction, an examination of both
its 1980s setting and of the many histories out of which such a moment emerges.
Grovetown is quickly revealed (particularly through a harrowing sequence
involving Florida Grange, whose disappearance in the town is what brings Hap
and Leonard there in the first place) to be a Sundown Town, a dark
and under-remembered American history that both aligns with the Klan and yet also
reflects the far wider and broader scope of white supremacist violence. Which
is to say, the Devil has always been in places like East Texas, and most
everywhere else in the U.S., and he’s worn the clothes and the face of white
supremacy and domestic terrorism.
Last context
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Thoughts on H&L, or other
shows you’d highlight?
Enjoyed your post! Came across it in a random way. I love H&L also, have read some short stories and seen all 3 seasons. I appreciate your comparison between L.C. Soothe and Robert Johnson (which is how I found you, after discovering Johnson's music today, and looking for the connection). Cheers and be well.
ReplyDeleteSame here... I just have to get the LC Soothe opening sequence song but cannot find it anywhere - Any thoughts or knowledge of who recorded
DeleteThanks for these comments! I'm not sure where to find that Soothe song, but will look around and keep y'all posted. Be safe,
DeleteBen