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May 31, 2007
Thursday Links
Still writing for some relatively immediate deadlines, so just a quick pointer to a couple of links. I'm still apparently having problems with comments here (again, signing in through TypeKey seems to be working), which has made blogging seem like much more of a one-way activity lately and seems like it may be changing how I blog. Kathleen wrote recently about the ways in which blogging consistently changes the way she sees the world, and I think that my uncertainty about whether anyone is reading has changed how I blog, which in turn, may be changing how I see the world (and I'll be the first to admit that I'm guilty of not commenting on others' blogs as frequently as I should, especially now that I'm reading blogs through an RSS feed). I'm blogging relatively consistently this summer, but for whatever reason, the blog feels less like it's part of a conversation and more like it's part of a monologue.
At any rate, via Adrian, I just discovered that film and media scholar Sean Cubitt now has a blog. Given my own interests in the relationship between screen and media cultures and configurations of public and private, I was particularly taken by his discussion of Virilio and the iPod. I like his reading that one of the main distinctions between the iPod and the Walkman is the "shuffle" function, which perhaps intensifies the sense of privacy in public already associated with the Walkman.
Thanks to Tama's delicious page, I also came across yet another trailer mashup, this time combining Star Wars with Boogie Nights, which is just a great combination on about fifty different levels. Enjoy.
Posted by chuck at 3:57 PM | TrackBack
May 30, 2007
Local Professor Recycles Bottles...
...and makes the local news. I'm actually pretty annoyed that Fayetteville doesn't have curbside recycling, so I'm happy to use a few seconds of my fifteen minutes of fame to push for a better recycling program. Yes, that's me dropping off shopping bags full of beer bottles in the recycling bins in the video (not sure how much longer the video will be up, but it's pretty amusing).
Comments, alas, still seem to be down (although they may be working now). For now, maybe, if you have comments, email them to me (chutry[at]msn[dot]com) and I'll post them in the "extended entry" section of whatever post you want to address.
Posted by chuck at 7:04 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack
May 29, 2007
The Summer Sizzle
A few days ago, I was interviewed by Fayetteville's alternative weekly, Up and Coming Magazine, about the summer movie phenomenon, and while I was able to get across some basic points about summer movies, I can't help but think that the article's author and I were speaking at cross-purposes. While I did try to emphasize that there is some evidence that "tentpole movies routinely suck the air out of the box office," as Charles Acland observes in Screen Traffic (a great book by the way), I didn't intend to create such a polarized relationship between film franchises such as Spider-Man or Pirates of the Caribbean and independent filmmaking.
But I also found myself working against the author's thesis that Hollywood movies are getting worse (something that got cut out of the final article). As the "Badger squad" discussion suggests, sequels are not automatically second-rate, nor do they imply that Hollywood is in a state of decline, and in fact, the trend towards serialized storytelling can open up possibilities not available in a single two-hour film (it's also worth noting, as David Bordwell points out, that sequels have existed at least since Homer penned the Odyssey as a sequel to the Iliad).
More than anything, I was trying to challenge some of the assumptions typically found in many summer movies articles, but I'm not quite sure it worked. At any rate, I always find it jarring when I'm quoted by somebody else, so I find the article pretty frustrating, but I'm glad that I'm starting to connect with some of the folks in the arts community here in Fayetteville.
Comments seem to be down again. We're working on it [updated to clarify/correct a couple of points].
Posted by chuck at 6:50 PM | TrackBack
Tuesday Links
My original post on On the Lot disappeared, and I'm too busy to re-create it, but here's the Cinematical review of the show best described as American Idol meets Project Greenlight minus Simon Cowell. I like the idea of a competition show about making movies, but a big part of the appeal of Idol has always been the liveness of the performances, something that is harder to reproduce in a moviemaking competition. Plus most of this week's comedy shorts played like Farrely Brother scripts as directed by David Lynch--exquisite visuals to tell fart jokes. I want to like On the Lot, in part because the show seems to be working to cultivate an interesting online community, but so far I'm uninspired. Gabe at Gabe's Declaration of Principles appears similarly unimpressed.
One of my projects this summer is a co-written article on political mashup videos. We're obviously focusing on "Vote Different" and "George Bush's Imagine," but I found a few others I'd like to discuss, including this Godfather 4 trailer that satirizes the Department of Justice scandal. And while it's not strictly a mashup, I find this Tom Tancredo 24 video very funny (although I imagine that the humor in this case is unintentional).
I can't remember how I stumbled across the news about Jonathan Demme's latest documentary, Right to Return: New Home Movies from the Lower 9th Ward, but it sounds like a compelling film, an important companion to Spike Lee's When the Levees Broke. From what I understand, the film will be playing at Silverdocs, but segments of the documentary will be airing on the Tavis Smiley Show (many of those segments are available online at the link above). More than anything, I think it's important to continue to focus attention on the rebuilding process in New Orleans, and I'm glad that Demme is using his clout as a filmmaker to tell these stories. Felicia Lee has an article on Return in the New York Times (which may be where I learned about the film).
Also worth checking out: Jason Mittell crunches the box office numbers and debunks an article arguing that this year's sequels are underperforming at the box office. In fact, Spidey 3, Shrek 3, and Pirates 3 are drawing about as well as, if not better than, the third films in most film cycles. And while not explicitly mentioned in Jason's post, these sequels are also keeping alive all of teh ancillary sources of income associated with film franchises.
Posted by chuck at 5:12 PM | TrackBack
May 28, 2007
Monday Links
Spent last night watching movies with friends until late into the night, so I'm getting a slow start this morning. Worth mentioning: we caught Adrienne Shelly's Waitress at the local art house. Like Film Snob, I enjoyed the film's primary framing device, Jenna's (Keri Russell) habit of inventing new pies to reflect her current mood (I Don't Want Earl's Baby Pie), and while Film Snob is probably right to point to some narrative gaps, Waitress, which I found to be far less self-consciously quirky than last year's Little Miss Sunshine, generally hit the right marks for me. More than anything, I enjoyed the camaraderie among the three waitresses (Russell, Shelly, and Cheryl Hines). It's a nice antidote to the blockbusters that tend to dominate the summer schedule.
I also wanted to mention, at least in passing, the fan uprising to save the CBS series Jericho, one of my favorite new shows in 2006. Virginia Heffernan is reporting on a campaign to send thousands of pounds of peanuts to CBS headquarters to protest the series' cancellation (the use of "nuts" refers to a specific line from the show during a confrontation with a neighboring town). So far over 14,000 pounds have been received, according to Nancy Baym, who has also written extensively on the fight to save Jericho. Baym also discusses the anti-fan backlash when the fight to save Jericho got Slashdotted. I may return to this topic in the next few days in my next column for Flow, which will come out in just over a week.
Baym also has a post about the very cool project, Pop Songs 07, in which Matthew Perpetua is posting mini-reviews of every R.E.M. song. Growing up near Athens, GA, in the 1980s, I "discovered" R.E.M. relatively early, so this project not only taps into my mini-music geek but also into my memories of listening to the band. As Baym points out, the reviews have inspired some interesting conversations about those kinds of memories, about politics, and even the songs themselves.
Comments may be working soon. I was able to leave a comment by signing into TypeKey, so if you feel so inclined, you should be able to comment that way. But we should have comments working correctly soon.
Posted by chuck at 12:15 PM | TrackBack
May 27, 2007
638 Ways to Kill Castro
I received a review copy of Dollan Cannell's 638 Ways to Kill Castro (IMDB) a few weeks ago but haven't had time to review it because of a variety of circumstances--including some technical difficulties with the blog. It's also one of those documentaries that confounds any kind of immediate response, in part because of the twisted political relationship between the US and Cuba, one that has been in the news quite a bit lately because of Castro's health problems (old age may finally do what the CIA could not) and because of Michael Moore's depiction of the Cuban health system in Sicko (or more precisely Fred Thompson's depiction of Sicko).
638 Ways takes its title from the extensive catalog of assassination attempts compiled by Fabian Escalante, who has written a book by the same title. But instead of offering a somber, overly serious treatment of these attempts, Cannell's film borrows from B-movies and detective films in depicting the often bumbling attempts to take out Cuba's longtime leader. Many of these attempts--which included a CIA plot to put a beard-removal substance on Castro's shoes, an exploding cigar, a poisoned wetsuit--are the stuff of bad spy movies, or at least bad James Bond villains, which makes this B-movie approach seem rather fitting (in fact, according to the Guardian article on the film, John Kennedy actually consulted Bond author Ian Fleming). This B-movie technique has the approach of satirizing Castro's would-be assassins, many of whom were willing to appear in the film, but it also has the effect of trivializing Cuba's human rights record, which is far from perfect. In fact, the film offers only minimal insight into Castro or the specifics of the Cuban government, which likely means that the film will do little to change perceptions of Castro, socialism, or Cuba itself as a country.
That being said, I think it's worth emphasizing and criticizing US policy towards Cuba, specifically the widely documented assassination tries and the other attempts at regime change (including, of course, the Bay of Pigs fiasco). And while the accounting system that identifies 638 different assassination attempts might exaggerate things slightly, the film raises important questions about the US role in Cuba, with Escalante asserting that there have been multiple attempts on Castro's life under every US president since Eisenhower. And as Cannell points out in the Guardian article, the film addresses important questions about how the US government defines terrorism: "what shrieks at you is the double standard."
The film's website has a number of articles about Cuba and Castro and features a number of clips from the film itself. I continue to be fascinated by the access Cannell received to people who might, under other circumstances, be labeled as terrorists and continue to think about the film's resonances with contemporary events, including Moore's depiction of Cuba in Sicko. Comments are currently down, so if you have anything you'd like to add, feel free to email me (chutry[at]msn[dot]com) and I'll include reactions in updated versions of this entry.
Posted by chuck at 3:18 PM | TrackBack
Lazy Sunday Links
Thanks to some thunderstorms near Chicago, I returned from my visit to Champaign very late last night, so I've spent much of the morning recovering from the trip. I very much enjoyed my visit, especially catching up with old friends, but I was also vividly reminded of why I enjoyed my two years as an instructor at the University of Illinois. Champaign-Urbana is an underrated college community, even livelier than I remembered.
But because of the travel and a general desire to escape from the wired world for a few days, I've fallen way behind the rest of the blogosphere, so here are a few links that I've been following this morning over my second--soon to be third--cup of coffee:
- It's somewhat old by internet standards (it was posted a month ago), but I think this "Introducing the Book" skit from Danish television, in which a medieval reader is being introduced to the book as if by an IT expert is pretty funny. It might also fun to watch in a media studies class.
- There are some interesting conversations going on over at Dr. Mabuse's place. One of the most interesting is the discussion of Cinema Tour, a website devoted "to thoroughly research and document the locations and histories of cinemas throughout the world." This prompts Jason to propose a game in which he asks whether you can remember where you saw a specific film. I generally have a pretty good memory for this sort of thing, and in some cases, I can even remember the specific screen on which I watched a certain film. But Cinema Tour looks like a great resource for people interested in screen culture.
- Jason also has an interesting post on the politics of cinephilia, something I've been thinking about in my own work lately (Jason includes a mention of Richard Porton's Cineaste essay, "The Politics of American Cinephilia," which I need to revisit).
- On a related note, Michael at Zigzigger offers a useful taxonomy of film blogs in order to give that discussion a little more (media) specificity.
- Finally, the Cinecultist points to Mike Mills and Miranda July's Blonde Redhead video. Enjoy.
Update: Forgot to mention that comments are still down because of ongoing security issues. We're working on it.
Posted by chuck at 12:09 PM | Comments (3) | TrackBack
May 21, 2007
Wide Awake and Storming the Gates
Lots happening at the home office of The Chutry Experiment. I've been frantically finishing an article that I'd temporarily shelved, hence the relative blog silence (said article is now in the mail). And later this week, I'll be traveling to Champaign, Illinois to visit some very good friends of mine. It'll be great to see them again, and I'm also looking forward to seeing Chamapign, where I lived for two years while finishing my PhD.
I'm revisiting some of my work on documentary this summer and I happened to notice an advertisement for Alan Berliner's latest documentary, Wide Awake, which deals with insomnia. There's an "insomniac premiere" Tuesday night at 1:30AM. Since I'll probably be awake--I've fallen deep into my summer schedule--I may try to watch, but as a fan of Berliner's The Sweetest Sound, I'm curious to see what he's doing in his latest doc.
Comments are still down, so I've been posting elsewhere when I think it's relevant. If you're so inclined, check out my latest contribution to the blogger-critic fray, a response to Richard Schickel's remarkably undemocratic anti-blogger screed.
Posted by chuck at 12:17 PM | TrackBack
May 19, 2007
100 Movies and More
Like Michael, I really enjoyed the 100 Movies 100 Quotes 100 Days montage on YouTube, which counts down from 100 using quotes from Hollywood films. It's a gentle parody of the AFI video montages, but the video also wears its fannish enjoyment of the movies on its sleeve, relishing both classical and contemporary Hollywood films. Michael mentions Clint Eastwood, but there's also Humphrey Bogart, Bettie Davis (at #32), and, my personal fave: Emilio Estevez talking about fake IDs.
Still having some trouble posting entries here (and with comments as well), so I may re-post this and some other material over at Newcritics, just because I've been a slacker about posting over there.
Posted by chuck at 12:47 PM | TrackBack
May 17, 2007
Still Blogging Elsewhere
Still having problems with Movable Type, so for now, I just wanted to point to a couple of posts on my temporary Tumblr blog. One post focuses on my interest in the recent controversy over Michael Moore's Sicko, specifically Moore's open letter to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson regarding the investigation into Moore taking 9/11 workers to Cuba for medical treatment. Of course the controversy will do nothing other than serve to further promote Moore's film.
Also worth noting: Two excellent posts at Dr. Mabuse on Julia Lesage's article on film blogging and social bookmarking. I'm working through some of these ideas for the book chapter I'm revising, so the discussion has been especially fruitful (and I'd encourage others to join in).
Also intrigued by the new documentary, Trailer Trash: A Film Journal, which apparently makes extensive use of home movies in relating a family drama. Comments still aren't working, but hopefully things will be back to normal soon.
Posted by chuck at 9:18 PM | TrackBack
May 15, 2007
Blog Issues
Looks like we're continuing to have security problems with comments, which means that comments probably aren't working right now (and may not be for the next few days). The Wordherders are in the process of moving to Word Press, which may, of course, take a few days. I'll keep everyone posted on all the changes that are taking place.
Posted by chuck at 4:01 PM | TrackBack
Blogs, Reviews, and Buzz
The Alliance of Women Film Journalists has another interesting discussion this week. This time, they're addressing whether "buzz" belongs in film reviews. In particular, they're looking at the recent examples of gossip about Lindsay Lohan's partying in reviews of Georgia Rule and details of Adrienne Shelley's untimely death in reviews of Waitress. Interesting question, because in some cases, repeating such buzz may put the reviewer in the position of promoting the film by repeating what amounts to studio publicity (I'm thinking here of something like the Brad-Angelina gossip that was used to promote Mr. and Mrs. Smith and the Jennifer-Vince rumors that were used to promote the stunningly mediocre Break Up).
But because I see the publicity as part of the film's overall meaning, I have to admit that I think it's inappropriate to completely ignore this kind of buzz. It would be impossible to view Georgia Rule completely in a vacuum, and Lohan's partying ways will inevitably inform how we view her character. But there's a second issue for me when it comes to Lohan, and it's the gender double-standard when it comes to partying. In her response to this question, Eleanor Ringel mentions the ways in which Lohan's partying seems to be treated much differently in the press than, say, Johnny Depp's behavior when he was a young star trashing hotel rooms.
The Shelley case seems a bit more complicated. In a sense, knowledge about her death shouldn't matter, but I can't imagine watching or writing about the film without thinking about it (Waitress doesn't come to Fayetteville until May 25th). Again, the discussions taking place at the AWFJ blog are worth checking out, especially given the ongoing conversations about the new directions that film reviews and criticism are taking.
Note: I had trouble posting this entry earlier today, so reposting to see if things are working properly. In other news, I've accepted an invitation to post occasionally at the very cool Newcritics blog. More on that in the next few days.
Posted by chuck at 8:54 AM | TrackBack
May 12, 2007
Year of the Dog
For well over four years, I've written blog reviews--more precisely responses--to virtually every film I've seen in a movie theater. A 4/4 teaching load and some other priorities have made such a task impossible to sustain. More crucially, I'm not enjoying writing the responses as much as I used to. This change of heart coincides with, but isn't really related to, last week's dust-up about blogging film critics or cloggers or whatever we're calling ourselves these days.
I'm still planning to blog about most of the films that I watch but in a less formal way. It's probably no accident that my decision to change my blogging practices occurred after seeing Mike White's Year of the Dog, a self-consciously quirky indie film that seemed to be about being a Self-Consciously Quirky Indie Film more than anything else. And I'm not sure if what follows counts as a review as much as a mini-rant about a certain mode of indie filmmaking.
I wanted to like the film quite a bit more than I did. Molly Shannon's Peggy, an unmarried thirty-something woman who has her comfortable life shattered when her pet beagle dies suddenly, isn't a character who normally appears a lead character in a Hollywood film. And I could easily get behind a film that affirmed Peggy's freedom to be single, quirky, and weird. But I could never quite grasp what the film's attitude was towards Peggy. White seems to be aligned with other misanthropic indie filmmakers such as Alexander Payne and Todd Solondz, and while a film shouldn't feel obligated to like its lead character, the coldness of Year of the Dog, especially towards its female characters is what stuck with me, and Dog is absolutely icy towards Peggy's over-protective sister-in-law, Bret (played by Laura Dern).
If I were writing a regular review, I'd probably also complain about the third-act disappearance of Newt (Peter Saarsgard), an animal rescue worker who seems like a potential suitor for Peggy, but whose sexuality is so ambiguous that reviewers have read him as straight but celibate, gay, and just plain celibate. White has assembled some interesting characters (again, with the exception of Bret, who isn't remotely funny as satire), but the film stopped well short of doing anything interesting with them.
Posted by chuck at 7:05 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack
May 10, 2007
Up in Smoke
Just noticed the news that the MPAA has decided to take cigarette smoking into consideration in assigning ratings for its films. Movies that "glamorize" cigarette smoking or depict "pervasive" smoking may now receive R ratings according to this policy. MPAA chief Dan Glickman notes that some people have lobbied for an automatic R-rating for any film that depicts cigarette smoking, and while the MPAA wisely chose a less stringent policy, the new policy still seems overly restrictive, and it opens up a gray area that is likely to harm smaller films that tackle subjects in an insightful, reflective manner.
Kind of makes you wonder whether Thank You for Smoking would now get an NC-17 for excessive promotion of tobacco use.
Posted by chuck at 6:26 PM | TrackBack
May 9, 2007
Blogger Critics Redux
I'll try to return in a more focused way to this topic later, but for now some links to various versions of the ongoing and quickly evolving conversation about blogging and film critcism.
First, Anthony clarifies yesterday's post and points to Kurt Cobain About a Son filmmaker AJ Schnack's contribution to the discussion. I think AJ is right to distinguish between film bloggers and IMDB commenters, which AJ calls "online know-it-alls" or OKIAs, and to raise questions about what exactly constitutes an "average" moviegoer and how those moviegoers might be using film blogs to make decisions about what movies they watch. There is an issue of "taste" that needs to be considered here and those readers who consult OKIAs rather than Manohla Dargis or A.O. Scott probably already recognize that they fit into the taste community addressed by the OKIAs.
That being said, Anne Thompson has pointed to some of the fundamental economic and industrial shifts that are rapidly changing the status of the film critic, with many critics being fired or replaced by wire services or other cheaper alternatives. Most recently affected is Eleanor Ringel-Gillespie, who was replaced after thirty years of service by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution by a wire service. Because I grew up reading the AJC, I know Ringel-Gillespie's reviews rather well and always appreciated her work (even if I didn't always agree), and I'm dissapointed by the AJC's decision.
There's a much longer disussion of this issue at the Alliance of Women Film Journalists that is worth checking out. They point out that while the media landscape is clearly changing, "moviegoers have relationships--love ‘em or hate ‘em--with their local movie reviewers. Local critics provide priceless perspectives that simply cannot be replaced." In reading through the AWFJ article, however, I'm wondering the real villain isn't the film blogger but media consolidation itself as media conglomerates increasingly find ways to reduce expenses. I do think it's important to preserve these local perspectives, and I think AJC readers will quickly discover that the paper is underestimating Ringel-Gillespie's valuable contribution to the city's film coverage.
There's also an elitist assumption going around that most film bloggers are merely celebrating the popular, that they are complicit with the ongoing "homogenization" of mass culture, which strikes me as a serious misreading of what many film bloggers are doing. Certainly a number of film bloggers go out of their way to promote independent and non-US cinemas rather than merely adding to the noise about the latest franchise film to hit the local megaplex (on five screens!). It's probably also worth noting that these discussions of the state of film criticism usually take place over the summer when the biggest excesses of Hollywood are most visible and when the gap between critical perspectives on Hollywood films and populist tastes are probably at their widest.
Somewhat unrelated: Ted Pigeon has an interesting reading of Dargis's article on the relationship between the critic and the modern blockbuster. That being said, I'm not sure I agree with many of Dargis's conclusions. I don't think that negative critical opinion of Top Gun or 300 necessarily derives from the "literary bent" of critics who are horrified at the "infection" of movies by MTV or videogame aesthetics. While I more or less enjoyed Top Gun when it came out (I was about 12 years old at the time), it's the film's politics that troubled me, not some other aesthetic form that threatened the "purity" of cinema. I don't think that many film critics object to action sequences if they're well done--witness the critical praise for Spider-Man 2, which probably helped feed the disappointment over the more recent film. That being said, I'm probably inherently suspicious of any film whose budget exceeds that of a small country, in part because as the budget increases, there's less space for taking certain kinds of risks.
I need to get back to some last-minute grading (and some other work that has been on my desk for a while), but David at Green Cine also points to a few more articles that are discussing the changing role of the film critic.
Posted by chuck at 1:20 PM | Comments (5) | TrackBack
May 8, 2007
Blogger Cloggers
Anthony Kaufman has an interesting read on Anne Thompson's Variety article on film blogs. While Kaufman agrees that film blogs are becoming a permanent fixture of film culture, he also introduces a welcome note of skepticism on the implications of film blog culture, explaining that film critic bloggers, or cloggers, have, in some cases, made it more difficult to find reliable reviews, especially of smaller films that often depend on good internet buzz in order to find a larger audience.
Kaufman cites the example of Sujewa's frustration at Cynthia's review of Hannah Takes the Stairs as one example of this potential for frustration. But I would argue that Cynthia's review tells me more about Hannah than any plot summary or "straight" film review ever could. This may be because I've read Cynthia's blog for several years and know something about her style, but I think her parsing of the film's gender politics is an important perspective on the film, and one that contextualizes Hannah within the larger context of the Mumblecore movement.
The discussion of film blogging, which spills out into the comments on Sujewa's blog, points to an ongoing conversation film bloggers have been addressing for some time (inspired, in part, by Scott Karsten's Boston Globe column), one that opens into larger questions about how we validate authors or, more specifically, film reviewers and critics, and film blogs, which are often self-published obviously upset many of the criteria we use for finding reliable readings of films. I don't think this has to be a bad thing for filmmakers or audiences. Even while living outside of an urban center, I've been able to remain connected to much of what is going on in the indie and documentary scenes. And much of what we see on film blogs might simply be the equivalent of bar chatter, the word-of-mouth conversations that we've always had about movies rather than cultural pronouncements along the lines of Pauline Kael, Manohla Dargis, or Roger Ebert.
I'm not sure if I have any specific answers yet about what effects film blogs have on the larger film culture. I think it's an important conversation, though, and one that probably doesn't have a simple answer.
Posted by chuck at 5:24 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack
May 7, 2007
Monday Morning Coffee Reads
Slowly but surely moving into summer mode. I'm planning to make a serious dent in writing the book this summer and hoping to get back in the habit of exercising frequently, which may mean a little less blog time. But here's a quick tour of my morning blog and newspaper reading:
- Via CCC: I've been meaning to write a longer blog entry on MoveOn's Video Vets Project. The documentary project features interviews with Iraq vets and their families about their views on the war in Iraq. Hoping to get a chance to write something longer about this project later, but for now, Sam's blog entry on VideoVets is worth checking out.
- Pretty much everyone has pointed to this article on YouTube's decision to share revenue with some its most prominent videobloggers, including lonelygirl15. There's lots of good debate out there about this decision, including the observation that it creates a kind of "YouTube elite."
- Clancy mentions FitDay, a cool resource for tracking your carbohydrate, fat, and protein intake. I've gained a little weight this year, in part because I'm not walking nearly as much as I was in DC last year, so I'm trying to find ways of encouraging myself to lose a little weight.
- Anne Thompson has a nice column about the effects of blogging on film coverage. Lots of good stuff here, including a discussion on how bloggers often speed up the celebrity buzz machine. Thompson also notes the ways in which studios have learned to "play" fan bloggers by using them for advance publicity for their films.
- Manohla Dargis has an interesting article on the modern blockbuster written in anticipation for some superhero movie that came out last weekend. Rumor has it the film even did pretty well at the box office, countering some of those "moviegoing is dead" stories we've been hearing.
- Interesting article on the continued evolution of the super-small screen. While Hollywood has begun to embrace the mobile screen, apparently advertisers are lagging. But isn't the super-small screen really just a place for advertising content on larger screens elsewhere, a way of directing our attention to certain franchise narratives?
- Interesting LA Times article on GreenTeaGirlie, the latest YouTube celebrity. Her meteoric rise to popularity has left many YouTube viewers suspecting that GTG might be a marketing hoax of some kind.
Posted by chuck at 12:04 PM | TrackBack
May 5, 2007
Debate Update
Good for CNN. Daily Kos passed along the good news that CNN, hearing the requests of academics, activists, and bloggers, has decided to release all debate footage to the public domain (I blogged about this a few days ago). In other good news, several Democratic presidential candidates, including Chris Dodd, Barack Obama, and John Edwards have joined the call.
Posted by chuck at 11:08 PM | TrackBack
Spider-Man 3
Spider-Man 3 (IMDB) opens with Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire, who's getting too old to play a college kid) quietly relishing his celebrity status. Crime in New York is down--even without Rudy Giuliani running things--and images of Spider-Man are broadcast from giant screens in Times Square. Even his girlfriend, Mary Jane (Kirsten Dunst), is on her way to stardom as a Broadway actress in a lavish musical. But Parker's contentment is subtly undercut. The kids are bored with Spider-Man's heroics, and MJ's acting and singing career isn't quite panning out, thanks to some bad reviews. Not that Peter notices. After all, he's become too preoccupied with his own press.
Peter's selfish turn, caused by some nasty space goop and visually represented through the black Spider-Man costume, seemed like an interesting idea conceptually. After the second film departed from most of the Marvel storylines, I had hoped that the third film would expand on Peter and MJ's emotionally complex relationship, but as both Manohla Dargis and Marjorie Baumgarten observe, Peter's turn to the dark side (or at least dark suit) isn't all that interesting or even that dark. There are a couple of funny moments when Peter struts down a New York sidewalk Tony Manero-style, but Parker's id is only one or two clicks over from my super-ego, so these scenes were never terribly convincing to me.
While most reviews have complained about the script's reliance on melodramatic sequences involving Peter, MJ, and Harry (James Franco), I found myself wanting more scenes with MJ. Where the second film seemed to give MJ some independence--see Cassie's comments in my review--the third film seemed to be much more about Peter's personal midlife crisis. Harry, who conveniently develops a case of temporary amnesia after a fight with Spider-Man, does briefly disrupt Peter and MJ's relationship, but it's difficult to see him as an interesting and attractive alternative to MJ (other than his personal wealth). The other villains were more or less workmanlike--Thomas Haden Church as Sandman worked well, and the subtle touches, such as the braodly-striped shirt and the tenement apartment--associating him with a fugitive from a 1930s chain gang were entertaining. Topher Grace's Venom was about as sleazy as a PG-13 movie would allow.
In terms of the fight scenes, I suppose they were dramatic and exciting enough. I still find it difficult not to forget that I'm basically watching computer animation sequences, not "real" fight (or flight) scenes. They're pretty enough but seem to lack solidity, even when Spider-Man is being crushed into a building or leaping off of falling pieces of rubble. But there were at least two gaping plot holes that pretty much ruined the film for me, all other things considered. I'll hide them below the fold for those readers who don't want those plot holes "spoiled" for them.
The main plot hole that was borderline embarrassing: Harry's butler revealing to Harry after something like five years that Peter/Spider-Man didn't kill his father. Couldn't he have mentioned this before, you know while he was preparing one of the many hundreds of meals he made for Harry over those five years? Or maybe while he watched Harry build the equipment and costume he would wear when taking revenge on Peter. Did the butler have amnesia, too?
Amnesia subplots in general are usually a sign that the writers are running out of ideas, but for the Peter, MJ, Harry, triangle, it worked relatively well, especially in playing with the degree of knowledge each of the three central characters had at various points. Still, when Harry regains his memory and "forces" MJ to break up with Peter, I wasn't convinced. The second film went out of its way to paint her as a much more assertive character. I wouldn't have blamed her for breaking things off with Peter because he was a jerk but because she was intimidated by Harry? Whatever. Next time, Mr. Raimi, don't hire your brother as a screenwriter. That being said, pretty much everyone seemed bored this time around. There's so much money involved that it's hard to imagine there won't be a Spider-Man 4, but to me, the series really felt like it was running out of energy.
Posted by chuck at 11:19 AM | Comments (6) | TrackBack
May 3, 2007
Goodbye, Stars Hollow
Bummer. Just got the news via Mike that Gilmore Girls, one of my favorite TV shows, has been cancelled. I'll admit that I lost enthusiasm for the show after it migrated over to the new CW, but the show's characters were among the most likable and memorable on television, and the dense, talky scripts were always something I appreciated. The series finale will be broadcast on May 15.
Posted by chuck at 4:47 PM | TrackBack
DVD, Internet Radio, and Copyright
Still in grading mode, but I just wanted to mention a few more links that have crossed my path. First, Laura has an important post on the code that can decrypt the new HD DVD format, "Copy protection, web 2.0, and education." The issues of decryption are important, especially for film and media scholars who rely on clip compilations in class, and as Laura notes, it's important for film and mdia professors to continue asserting their fair use rights or risk seeing them lost as the market continues to evolve.
On a related note, I had somehow missed the news that the US Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) had severely hiked the royalty fees for internet radio stations. As of right now, Internet radio will remain safe until July, but basically the CRB ruling would cripple most internet radio stations with expensive royalty fees. Living in Fayetteville, I've come to depend on (commercial-free) internet radio stations such as KEXP Seattle for access to any kind of independent music scene, and KEXP and similar stations have helped launch the careers of a number of great indie rock musicians (including recent personal faves, Silversun Pickups and Wild Sweet Orange). Such a ruling, I believe, could hurt artists as well as audiences. The bipartisan HR 2060 would essentially reverse the CRB ruling and would allow internet radio to continue to thrive, so if this is an issue you're invested in, it might be worth contacting your representative.
As Laura notes in her entry on decryption, these stories don't receive a lot of play in the mainstream media, so it's important to talk about them and remain informed about what's going on with these copyright issues.
Posted by chuck at 3:41 PM | TrackBack
May 2, 2007
Wednesday Afternoon Links
What I've been reading and looking at instead of grading student papers:
- I've lost the source, but here are a few photos tagged "MIT5" from last weekend's Media in Transition conference. I can't find myself in any of the photos, which is a good thing because I have an aversion to being photographed, but David did take a few photos of the audience for our panel.
- I think I somehow missed Kim Middleton's post on MIT 5. Sam Ford's posts from the Convergence Culture Consortium are also worth checking out.
- On a related note, Karina has a follow-up to her New TeeVee column on movie mashups by women, a point I addressed in my MIT 5 paper. Karina did find the interesting looking film review series, Girls on Film. More on that tonight when I've had time to watch a couple of episodes (or at least feel less guilty about not grading).
- Anne Thompson cites a USA Today article arguing that comedy shorts are the "killer app" of the online video world.
- Also worth noting: Lost Remote points to a Wired article reporting that the US Army has ordered soldiers not to post to personal blogs or send emails without clearing the content with a superior. Failure to comply could result in a court-martial among other penalties. Soldiers' blogs and writings have provided me with an important perspective on the war, and I'd hate for that to be taken away.
Posted by chuck at 3:24 PM | TrackBack
May 1, 2007
Lazy Tuesday Links
Today's the last day of class, which means I'm looking for any excuse not to grade papers. Here's how I've been procrastinating this afternoon:
- Via Lost Remote, news that The Washington Post has acquired Jeff Jarvis's PrezVid videoblog.
- Agnes Varnum has a column (also posted at indieWIRE) on the recent rush of "green" docs. As she points out, An Inconvenient Truth seemed to come out of nowhere last year, but since then, we seem to have reached a "tipping point" on climate change, something reflected in the lineups at Full Frame and other documentary fests.
- One of the topics I addressed at MIT 5 was the "Seven Minute Sopranos" vid (and the similar "5 Second Movies" series). Now Sony has announced its own series of "minisodes," which will take vintage TV shows, such as TJ Hooker and Charlie's Angels and crunch them down to 3.5 minutes or less. I'm not terribly convinced that there will be a large audience for this kind of mashup kitscsh; after all, most mashups have relatively small audiences.
- On a related note, Liz Losh points to some new Colbert Nation mashup fun as well as Discovery Channel's You Spoof, which invites viewers to mashup their content.
- Finally, via Mike, the latest mashup of action movies and children's entertainment, Pulp Muppets.
Posted by chuck at 3:13 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack