February
15, 2005 One
of the real challenges of movie journalism and the movie business is defining
standards. So let me start by saying… my standards are my standards. People get
very cranky about anyone offering their standards because if they do not fit like
a warm furry glove, some tend to feel judged.
But
specifically in Entertainment World, there are so many options within any standard.
Start with a review. Some people can find a negative somewhere in even an unmitigated
rave, often based on someone involved with the project going unnamed. But in between
"Best of the Year" and "Worst of the Year" lies a lot of room
to overanalyze.
I
am endlessly amazed at how "It's good" has become seen as a slap in
the face. Good is not good enough. And I am always surprised at how one line,
usually a tough one, can embed itself deeper than a stinger.
On
the flip side, how does one measure success for the film industry. Is it the quality
of the films? If it is, does anyone ever consider how rare a, say, 75% agreement
on a film is by the critical community, much less the world of moviegoers who
actually pay for tickets and home entertainment. And I'm not just talking about
Rotten Tomatoes for critics. One "ripe" rating and the next can be dramatically
different.
For
instance, it was fair for Sony to claim that Spider-Man 2 was the best
reviewed film of the summer based on the percentage of positive reviews. But come
on… it was hardly the best reviewed film. It was the film that the highest percentage
of critics were okay with. But is that the standard for quality?
And
what about money? Have a conversation with a film writer about the quality of
a film and if they do not like it, they will say that box office means nothing…
and if they like it and it is financially successful, box office proves how right
they are. But worse, how can it be fair for anyone to completely throw out box
office as meaningless?
I
continue to argue that opening weekend has, with small occasional variations on
Sundays, nothing to do with the quality of a film. So, if a not -so-great film
opens huge and that leads to a $100 million overall gross, that may not be a really
clear indicator. But a film that opens and ends up doing better than three times
that opening and more than say, $125 million, you have to start considering the
idea that even if critics dislike a film, audiences are embracing it.
Likewise,
a genius like Charlie Kaufman just hasn't broken into the mainstream… we
have to admit it. When you have as much media attention as all of his films (except
Human Nature) have had and some of the strong box office actors that have
fronted them and you still can't break $40 million with Jim Carrey… who
opened Bruce Almighty to over $60 million in one three day period… you
are not a mainstream talent. But how soulless can you be to use that as a primary
standard? And… what about all of those smart, sophisticated, non-rubes who hate
everything Charlie has ever written?
One
of the things that inspired this column was a reader's e-mail about Sony's box
office trifecta this weekend. I asked, "What's there not to like?" The
answer was simple… in this person's opinion, all three movies sucked. I haven't
seen any of the three films, so I have no opinion about that. But it does point
out that there are very different standards for the many different jobs in the
industry. And journalists… and especially editors… as a rule, don't want to lift
and separate the various jobs, preferring to simply a thumb up or a thumb down.
But circling
around again, don't most entertainment consumers break it down to a simple "I
like it" or "I don't like it." The Matrix Reloaded was a
huge success by pretty much any standard, including critics, who reviewed the
film better than they did the original. But a very vocal core repeated the mantra
against the film over and over again. And The Matrix Revolutions did become
the disappointment that Reloaded was reported to be. So what is real? Do the two
sequels, together, hurt the legacy of the original film? Same with Star Wars.
Huge successes. There is no way for Star Wars I-III can ever be as revolutionary
as Star Wars IV - VI. But for a generation, these three films are the definition
of Star Wars… and they adore these films the way we Boomer/Xers adored
the originals. So what is right and what is wrong?
My
answer would be this… your opinion is your opinion and you have an absolute right
to it… even if I feel so strongly in the opposite direction that your opinion
makes me think you are a fool.
There
are absolutes in the movie world. But those absolutes are always overruled by
the gut instinct. Even embracing the absolutes is a reflection of one's gut instincts.
But where does
that leave a film critic? If your gut instinct is your primary engine, isn't everyone
a film critic? How does one set standards for the gig? Right now, that question
is being endlessly reconsidered, as the guys (mostly men) who had the twenty-five
"non-local" critics gigs continue to be held up as the standard a much
out of habit as anything else… except for experience. And experience matters.
I would say that
the best standard for film criticism - or any writing for that matter - would
be the ability to build an audience for the writing. If I had the power and the
cash, I would love to rank "the cream of the crop." Take the names and
outlet names off of the writing and have 20 groups of 100 movie lovers read a
review of the same film by 20 reviewers each week for three months. Have them
rate the writers. Take the top half of each group and double it up… ten groups
of 200 movie lovers reading a review of the same film by 20 reviewers each week
for three months. Then five groups of 400 reading 20 reviews a week. At that point,
you have found fifty critics who have been read by people, some of whom have been
satisfied for nine months. I tend to believe that with 2000 randomly selected
movie lovers, you will find enough people who want an Anthony Lane style
critic and a Roger Ebert and an Armond White and so on.
What
I don't think you'd get is fifty critics who do the same thing. And you surely
would not get the fifty critics that would be the best liked in the country. But
you would get real choice. I would expect the vast majority of the "survivors"
to really offer something to their readers in terms of knowledge of film and insight.
And I think we'd all have to agree that you would get critics who could write.
What you would
not get is a bunch of people who agree. And you would get past the tradition that
a writer is only as powerful as their outlet.
Of
course, this will not happen. Evolution is slow. And this is an evolutionary situation.
Roger Ebert will eventually retire. And when he does, there will be another
Ebert… quite different than Roger, but the next "The One," just as Ebert,
after a long blurry pause, became "The One" to follow Pauline Kael.
Who, how and why the next "Neo" comes to their perch is unknowable.
Kael's perch had a lot more to do with prestige on the coasts than a large number
of readers. Ebert's power has had a lot to do with the groundbreaking size of
his audience. From magazines to television to, I guess, the internet. (And for
those of you who think I am selling myself as "The One," I am already
too old to take that slot. I could be one of the many influencers of that writer,
but my guess is that he/she is in their 20s now and will have a voice all their
own.)
If I had
to guess, I would say that Tony Scott and Manohla Dargis will be
at the New York Times for the next 20 years, Tony getting better and better
at the job before getting the third Pulitzer for criticism in 2015. Ken Turan
will retire in the next five years and Carina Chocano will move on
to be an editor at Entertainment Weekly or some broader reach entertainment
media like that, perhaps allowing the LA Times to be the outlet to launch
the next "Neo." Wilmington will move on to a prestigious monthly outlet
and remain one of the most thoughtful critics, but Chicago will become a dead
zone… unless it turns out that Neo resides there… maybe Rosenbaum's eventual replacement
will turn out to be The One.
But
I digress…
The
challenge of standards is that they are really hard to maintain. And whatever
standard you are maintaining, someone is going to be out there to disagree or
even attack you for having the audacity of daring to hold that ground. Of course,
maybe your (or my) standard sucks.
Aye,
there's the rub… again… and again… and again…
READER
OF THE DAY: GO
SWEET writes: "Oscar 2006: Is it my imagination or does 2005 look like
a pretty good year for studio movies? And what do you hear about Class Action
– will it make 2005? Talk about Oscar bait and rearranging the Best Actress, Director
contest! Niki Caro directing Theron, Spacek, McDormand on the first successful
sexual harassment suit. If it scores, expect a huge drumbeat for Caro and with
the lack of high-profile Actress roles, they may try to get it our.
Disagreeing about movies:
You have never been more correct – the discussion over Million Dollar Baby alone
has gotten insane. Go over to Oscarwatch and view the madness. But have you ever
seen such shilling by critics for their favorite picks as this year? All time
high – and that ratchets up the phenomenon of which you speak.
$100
million BO: Surprised you have not written about this! The final tally for 2004
is… 11 over 150mil, 22 over 100mil,
while in 2003 it was… 8 over 150mil,
29 over 100mil
That’s
quite a change and different from the trend of always one more over 100mil. Yet
total BO about the same – it is the high middle that gets squeezed by marketing
in my opinion."
E-ME:
What's your standard?
The
Case for Sideways
The Case for The Aviator
The
Case for Million Dollar Baby
Sundance
Wrap-Up
Sundance
Preview Part I
Sundance
Preview Part 2