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Andy Dehnart, Wesley Morris, and Alex Pappademas

The Never-Ending "Who Do We Write For?" Question

Posted Tuesday, April 24, 2001, at 6:01 PM ET

Alex and Wesley,

Excuse me as I elbow my way into this conversation of and about critics. Alex, I think the never-ending "who do we write for?" question applies to all writers, not just critics. Should we play to the lowest common reader, write what we'd want to read, write to get acclaim and attention from our peers, or do some combination of the three? The best critics, I think, take the work they're critiquing, tumble it around completely, and offer both information and a perspective. In short, it doesn't matter who they're writing for as long as they're writing something substantive. In this era of media supersaturation, people can find what they want to read, whether it's Harry Knowles, EW's Lisa Schwarzbaum, or Wesley Morris.

A long time ago, I used to resent critics. Then I became an on-again, off-again critic and realized that it essentially involves explaining what amounts to a very personal reaction to the movie--whether that reaction is based upon a large volume of related knowledge or is just a visceral response to the material.

I've stopped using movie reviews as filters, instead preferring to read them after I've seen the movie--or if I have no intention of seeing the film at all. Trailers give away way too many details, and if a review mentions even a single scene to clarify a point, I generally feel cheated while I'm watching the movie. I know what to expect and wait anxiously for those moments. I want to be fully engaged by a film, drawn in, lead around for 90 minutes, not consumed with checking off points on my spoiler checklist.

Speaking of spoiling, Variety/Reuters had a blurb today revealing the end of tonight's second Chains of Love episode. (Last week's, by the way, was better than Endemol's previous piece of crap, Big Brother, but it was also appalling, since the contestant who had women chained to him was a manipulative, mentally abusive, sexist jerk.) This isn't the first time what will happen tonight has happened before on a reality TV show, but it's still significant, especially since they're chained together and since it could involve the exchange of money. I'll be watching, of course.

Andy

The Never-Ending "Who Do We Write For?" Question

Posted Tuesday, April 24, 2001, at 6:01 PM ET
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Andy Dehnart publishes Reality Blurred, works as a Web producer and free-lance writer, and is pursuing a master of fine arts in nonfiction writing. Wesley Morris is a film critic at the San Francisco Chronicle. Alex Pappademas is an editor at Blender, a new music magazine.
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Reader Comments From The Fray:


[Notes from the Fray Editor: President Bush on drilling, MTV and the youth market: same situation? Talk to WillV here. Thread your way through all the posts saying yes they do have the ads in Chicago (we know now, OK?) and find some posted lists: Zeitguy's Rools of Cool, Paul Caniff's answers to questions, and Gypsy's theory on disco. Jared White suggests Eggertian rather than Eggersesque. Check out the checkmarks for discussions on criticism and music. For more good stuff on film reviews read in full the fascinating posts from Steve Sailer and Aluminum Man (below). Done all that? Congratulations, you are now a complete popular culture Instant Expert. (Or a Breakfast Table Fray expert--same thing.)]


At the risk of sounding churlish--or rather, gleefully trying to sound churlish--the comment of your "Breakfast Table" writer about the Bush administration--"Essentially, they're politically motivated cowards" [Monday's entry]--demonstrates an acute lack of insight into, well, one of the great features of civilization. Politically motivated bravery is usually a suspect virtue--it led Napoleon into Russia, Hoover into a principled stand against "hand-outs," and Tom DeLay into being Tom DeLay. The real problem is that the Bushies face no bullying from the other side of the aisle: nobody who is willing to demagogue them, dog them, and dice them into the neutered conservatism which was Jr.'s daddy's trademark. In the weird mores of Washington, the dogger/dicer really doesn't have to have a national constituency--just a nasty taste for institutional infighting. If only Wellstone had Gingrich's taste for lowmindedness.

--Roger

(To reply, click here.)


Having recently become the film critic for United Press International, I've been thinking a lot about these issues. The biggest problem with movie reviews in general is that reviewers are so homogenous--almost always male, white, upper middle class, with a grad degree in humanities or liberal arts, urban, high IQ, intellectual but not hugely logical or well-informed about things beyond the cultural realm like business or science or sociology, and extremely opinionated--that the tastes of huge demographic groups get ignored. I fall in most of those categories, too, but coming at a rather late age to this trade, I just don't as often experience anymore the testosterone surge that makes me want to shove my opinion down the throats of people who aren't like me.

For example, women. Over the years I've noticed that women generally don't like the same movies I like. That used to offend me greatly. I figured I could cure women of their bad taste in movies by exposing them to the really good stuff (i.e., what I liked) and explaining to them--over and over again--why it's better than the crap they liked. Slowly, though, I grew to respect women and their tastes more. I also learned that lots of other people aren't as smart as me and that making them watch what I liked to watch wasn't going to make them enjoy it more. Now, I take steps to help put myself in other peoples' shoes...

--Steve Sailer

(To reply, or to read this post in full, click here.)


Most Tom Green fans (and I'm not one of them) will have already decided to see Freddy Got Fingered a long time ago, and nothing that reviews have said (or will say) makes any difference. The same is true of the upcoming Lord of the Rings trilogy or the last installments of the increasingly awful Star Wars series. In fact, contrary to what the Breakfast Tablers are suggesting, I think most people have their minds made up about whether or not to see any given movie long before reviews hits the stands.

What informed, thoughtful, articulate critics can do is make us see, hear and understand things in movies that we otherwise might miss. They can challenge us by forcing us to examine elements that we might otherwise pass over, and make us look at a movie from a perspective perhaps unlike our own.

--Aluminum Man

(To reply, click here.)

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