I wasn’t sure whether to feel flattered or insulted by their estimation of my driving skills, but either way, I could see they had a point. As Barry so eloquently put it, “It’s one thing to be crushed to death in a Beetle by the woman you love, but being crushed to death in a Beetle by an English novelist in drag — gimme a break.”
Thirty
It’s six months later, and I’m back in California. It’s only temporary. I haven’t gone native, despite what Caroline might say. I’ve been home; I’ve been getting on with my life. I’ve been writing. But suddenly here I am again, on a movie set, specifically on a full-scale sound stage in Burbank. It’s very different from Fon-tinella in some ways, not so different at all in others. Chiefly there is a great deal more of everything: more people, more lights, more cameras, more activity, more commitment, more expertise, more money, more free food, more stuff of every kind.
Oh yes, and there are velociraptors, lots of them everywhere: models, puppets, animatronics; velociraptors made of rubber and foam and plastic, with metal armatures and ingenious, magical remote-control mechanisms. The creatures come in various sizes and varying degrees of completeness, sometimes there’s just a head on a stick, sometimes a single clawed foot or just an evil, beady glass eye — whatever’s required for their use in a specific scene or shot in the movie. This makes me happy. This feels like real progress.
But exactly as in Fontinella there’s an awful lot of waiting for something to happen; more than ever, a lot of standing around being sort of interested and sort of bored. Right now, for instance, we’re waiting for a Volkswagen Beetle to be filled with cement. Really.
♦
The truth is, everybody who’s ever owned a Volkswagen Beetle has got a Volkswagen Beetle story. 21,529,464 Beetles: that’s a lot of stories. And some people have owned more than one Beetle. Some people have owned fleets of them. Some people have collected them. And that’s why some people have multiple Volkswagen stories. Our job is to cash in on that.
Anything that can be done in, on, with or to a Beetle has been done. The cycle of conception, birth and death, even burial, even resurrection, has been played out around a Beetle; old stories, of love and hate, loss and redemption, fire and ice and explosion: archetypal stories, movie staples. It all adds up to a lot of history, and as Josh Martin so very nearly said, whether you know it or not, you’re always guaranteed to be repeating some version of somebody’s history. Certain people may even feel the need to repeat somebody’s urban legend.
Jan Harold Brunvand, the author of The Vanishing Hitchhiker, the first great book about urban myths, what they mean and how they spread, details several clusters of Beetle-related folklore, including ‘the cement-filled Beetle’. In this story a man who works as the driver of a ready-mixed-cement truck is driving past his own home one day and spots a Volkswagen Beetle parked outside. He recognises it as belonging to a friend of his. He parks the truck, goes into the house (very quietly, if the story is going to work) and finds his wife and friend in bed together, too engrossed to notice the husband’s presence. He slips out of the house without disturbing them, fills the Beetle with liquid cement from his truck and drives away. By the time his friend has finished in the bedroom the cement has solidified and his car now weighs several tons and has to be towed away by a special, heavy-duty tow truck.
As with all urban myths, this one comes in multiple versions, and moves effortlessly around the world — the United States, England, Denmark, Kenya — changing its specifics with local circumstances. Norway has a surprising number of variations. Sometimes there’s an extra twist: the friend and the wife aren’t in bed, but sitting innocently on the sofa, nevertheless the truck driver jumps to the same conclusion and again fills the car with cement, only to discover that wife and friend were in fact planning a surprise party for him. Sometimes he fills the car without even going into the house, and then discovers the wife won it in a competition or bought it for him as a birthday present.
Sometimes, to be fair, the car isn’t even a Beetle, and becomes something far fancier and more expensive, making its ruination that much more magnificent, but this also tends to make the story less believable. The fact that the Beetle is so ordinary and ubiquitous, helps with the credibility of the myth.
Ultimately, after much careful research, Brunvand concludes there’s no evidence that the events in the story ever happened at all, anywhere, to anyone. But that doesn’t make the story any less significant or potent as a myth. On this movie set, on this sound stage in Burbank, California, however, the cast and crew of the revivified production of Volkswagens and Velociraptors are about to make it happen ‘for real’.
♦
It feels good to be back in California. I couldn’t exactly say that I feel at home here, but certainly my actual home in England, in rural Suffolk, seemed extremely tame and grey after the dramas I’d been through in Fontinella, and the writer’s life, back at my desk, back at my computer, seemed especially plain and uneventful. Doing spellchecks and word counts, you’ll be unsurprised to hear, doesn’t contain quite the same raw exhilaration as launching a Volkswagen Beetle into the void.
I didn’t bother to tell people back home much about what had happened to me in Fontinella. Of course I told them that the production had ended in chaos, that Josh Martin had been a crazy man, that it had all been insane and unsatisfactory, but I didn’t tell the half of it. I didn’t mention my involvement with the automotive freak show, and I very definitely didn’t mention my brief, tarnished moment as a trans-vestite stunt jumper. I didn’t even tell my girlfriend Caroline about that. I thought it would sound either too fantastical, like I was making it up, or worse, that I was boasting.
Before the cast and crew of the movie went their separate ways, we all exchanged email addresses and promised to keep in touch. Nobody from the automotive freak show made such promises, and naturally nobody from the movie kept in touch with me, but after a month or so I did get an email from Angelo Sterling with a link to an online news item about a dead body that had been found in the burned-out wreck of a stolen Volkswagen Beetle that had spun off the road and ended up at the bottom of a canyon some way north of Los Angeles.
At that moment Josh Martin was still missing in action and Angelo thought it might be him. I had my doubts. It seemed too neat, a little too laden with poetic justice. And for what it’s worth, I was right. A week later I got another email from Angelo. They’d identified the body as that of a former security guard and tow-truck operator, though they didn’t mention his brief career as a snake wrangler, which I thought was a shame.
And shortly thereafter Angelo did manage to track down Josh Martin, who, as it turned out, despite being broke, was alive and in some ways perfectly well, and with Cadence’s help was in the process of reinventing himself as a maker of music videos for Latino rap bands. I learned this in another email from Angelo, but I didn’t read much into it, even though he told me I should stand by and ‘await developments’.