When Paul Thomas Anderson was seventeen, he made a short film called The Dirk Diggler Story (1988). Anderson – born in 1970, in Studio City (no less), California, the son of ABC network voiceover man Ernie Anderson – had made his first homemade film at eight, and been given his first camera at twelve. He spent his adolescence lugging around a Betamax, forever videotaping his friends. He made a host of parodies, knock-offs, goof-offs and in-jokes, growing up behind the camera. In his final year of high school, he upped his ambition, making a thirty-minute mockumentary about a fictitious porn star, parodying Exhausted: John C. Holmes, the Real Story (Julia St. Vincent, 1981), a softball documentary about 1970s porn’s, um, biggest star. The Dirk Diggler Story was juvenile and ridiculous,…
