Do you write and tell?

The New York Times runs occasional pieces on writing in its Draft feature.  They are of variable quality.  The latest one, called “Not Telling” is pretty good.  The writer, a novelist I’ve never heard of named Alice Mattison, is obsessively secret about her novels while she’s writing them:

If I talk about the book, I believe — I cannot help believing — my characters will be angry, and will no longer confide in me about their embarrassing, troubled lives.

She won’t even talk about the novel with her husband:

Once, I decided I should tell my husband a little about the novel I was writing. I informed him that I was about to do so and he sat up straight and looked eager. He’d been waiting for a while. I said — certain I was revealing something of interest — “It’s in five parts.” Then I sat back and waited for enthusiasm.

I have a lot of sympathy.  I share my drafts with my writing group, but no one else.  My lovely wife has been informed that I’m writing another one of those Walter Sands private eye novels, but that’s it.  In my case, I’m not afraid of my characters getting angry; I’m afraid that talking out loud about the plot will make it sound stupid — to me as well as to the listener — and I’ll lose the hubris I need to keep going.  At an early stage of writing, my plot is kind of stupid.  Not to mention my prose is scattered and unfocused, as I figure out motivations and settings.  But I need to stay confident that things are going to get better.  I need to keep the world I’m creating safe from outsiders until I’m sure enough in it to pull back the curtain.  Then, if people don’t like what I’ve created, I can figure out what, if anything, I need to change — without deciding the whole damn thing’s no good.

Are there 25 good movies about American politics?

Here is Vanity Fair’s list of the 25 best movies about American politics.  But… but…

All the President’s Men, sure. The Candidate, fine.  Dr. Strangelove?  It’s not exactly about politics, but OK.  All the King’s Men, A Face in the Crowd?  Of course.

But, um, The Queen?  Isn’t that sort of, you know, about British politics?  (The same folks brought us Frost/Nixon, which isn’t on the list, and probably should be.)  The same goes for In the Loop.

The American President is about American politics, of course, but really, it’s not that good a movie — it’s Aaron Sorkin clearing his throat before embarking on The West Wing.  If we want throat-clearing, what about including The Ides of March, which seems to be Beau Willimon’s warm-up for House of Cards?

Another omission from the list: the charming Dave, starring Kevin Kline and Sigourney Weaver.  Also, was I the only one who liked Primary Colors, with John Travolta and Emma Thompson portraying the fictional equivalent of the Clintons?

I’ve seen most of the movies on the list.  One that I’d never even heard of is Gabriel Over the White House, a 1933 fantasy produced by William Randolph Hearst. VF says:

Walter Huston plays a hack president-elect who gets into an automobile crack-up shortly after he’s sworn in. He is subsequently possessed by a spirit (see title) who guides his actions, which include staging firing squads on Ellis Island and bullying the world into submission by brandishing a super-secret military weapon. Quasi-fascism: it gets things done!

Sounds like it’s worth watching!