Year of the Shark: Annivyrsary 1975

ISSUE #312

1975 has officially been sold as the year of the shark and the Saturday Night. These two things were the ones to last. As much as it might make you cringe to hear, it’s undeniable: I’m a Brody sun, a Quint moon, a goddamn Hooper rising. A Gilda sun, a Conan moon, a Chevy… agh, you know what, fuck it.

But that is not my 1975. Fact is, this was the year Tarkovsky made Mirror. I’m watching it as we speak. There’s an inscrutable, universal truth to this film that’s inherent to everything worth living for—like meowing wildly out-of-pocket with your cat when you just want to know what’s up. It’s a natural grace that’s practically unspeakable. Photographs can do it. Also, poetry. These are the cosmic technologies, empathic seizures.

By 1975, the 50s trash was beautiful. Science fiction and B-horror movies were recycled to the lost and lonely of the ‘70s (there weren’t even video tapes!). Voilà—the Misfits, Rocky Horror, and Steven Spielberg are unlikely bedfellows. In another two decades, the ‘'90s would worship the ‘70s; soon the 21st century would beg for the ‘90s. On and on it could go, until the end of time.

So is ’75 really when a cultural levee broke? The ‘50s futurist optimism, the ‘60s refractive chaos, the new overwhelming new media of the new world… When looking back at all the different parts of a single year—the flotsam, the jetsam of ephemeral time—it takes a strong eye to know when you’ve been handed a lens of roses. I mean, Gerald Ford was president. Critics hated Born to Run. Metal Machine Music—a noise-rock masterpiece—was called Worst Album of All Time.

The truth is this: 50 years ago, Saigon fell. Thousands of U.S. personnel (and far too few Vietnamese civilians) were evacuated by helicopter. The Vietnam War ended, the whole affair such tragedy. There is little to say, even today, that truly captures what that vacuum of responsibility, of accountability—that sheer goddamn lack of answering to anything—did to humanity’s unspoken consciousness. At least we know something lasts.


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