Airing
It Out:
Reverse Shot Fesses Up We’ve
probably all done it. Faced with a deadline and
a film to be reckoned, it’s not uncommon to find
an easy path to the necessary word count through
the introduction of information about films we
may not have actually seen. Maybe it’s just a
brief sentence on an obscure filmmaker’s earlier
work for context, or a reference to some classic
film we know by heart through cultural proxy.
Oftentimes this kind of stuff goes unnoticed,
in others it feels riddled with all the authenticity
of platinum dye job, but in the face of an art
form that’s continually producing more and more
all over, what else can we do? This just betrays
the (wholly natural) impulse to provide the most
information from the most seemingly informed perspective
possible—we are trying to make arguments. But
for all the true rarities that there’s never even
time to think about seeing, every film lover has
a selection of embarrassing skeletons in their
closets, those universally lauded classics, firmly
ensconced in canons high and low, that remain
unseen, usually for a variety of reasons. You
don’t often find mainstream critics admitting
that they haven’t seen The Godfather or
The Bicycle Thief or King Kong or
Vertigo, but in all surety, they’re out
there.
Admittedly, most of the writers here at Reverse
Shot have degrees in some area of film, whether
in theory, history, or production, and thus acknowledging
these gaps is particularly smarting. Yet also
most of are doubly disadvantaged—not only are
the majority of us well below the average film
critic age, but most of us also hold down steady
work that keeps us from having the time to catch
up on all the films we could have been watching
had we been born 30 years earlier. It’s a double
bind, and we do what we can—catch a few films
at a retro here, Netflix there, but at a certain
point, I think many of us have come to grips with
the fact that, no, we’re just not going to be
able to see them all. But that doesn’t stop us
from giving it a go. In an effort to try to further
break down specious barriers between our readers
and writers, we present this issue as something
of confessional. Yes, we’ll admit it—there are
those among us who’ve never seen The Godfather,
The Bicycle Thief, King Kong, or
Vertigo, so here we are, giving old films
the freshest looks we can in the face an orthodoxy
that quietly suggests we shouldn’t and the weight
of history surrounding each that’s already placed
them on pedestals. Again, a confession: We don’t
know everything there is to know about movies,
and that’s fine by us—if we did we wouldn’t have
any reason to keep watching.
Of course there are infinite traps one could fall
into when writing in this manner; and does this
project necessitate preemptive strike on those
pitfalls or should one wholeheartedly embrace
them? How can one go about writing “unbiased,”
serious criticism on a work of art that’s been
digested and regurgitated anywhere from the past
10 to 90 years? We felt the best way to avoid
some of those inevitable biases that come with
film writing (completists’ slants towards favorite
auteur’s “one that got away,” first sit-thrus
after heavy duty cinema studies scholarship) was
by allowing each writer to “fess up” with a list
of 10 or so canonical films that they had never
actually seen and then allow us, their humble
editors, to select the best film for them, which
also allowed both for a nice variety in the issue
as well as an opportunity to play to the individual
writers’ strengths. Can one truly wrestle with
a film that’s widely considered “great”? And how
does one deal with that stamp of approval, especially
when trying to say something “new”?
Thankfully, the responses were wide-ranging, and
the variety was impeccable. Most surprising was
the content of the pieces themselves, which ranged
from anecdotal to historical, from personal to
political. Where else could there be a viewing
of Birth of a Nation as informed by the
events of Hurricane Katrina? Or the realization
that The Bicycle Thief’s cine-sociological
impact is still being felt half a world away in
Iran? Some writers have overcome their distrusts
and fears, whether toward gore or John Ford, while
others have had to question the epochal limits
of comedy (The Great Dictator) and visual
effects (King Kong). There’s no reason
we shouldn’t have seen these films before, but
there’s also no reason to continue our charade.
So for this season, we fess up. We all learned
something new; hopefully it will encourage you
to go out and finally brush up on your Feuillade
as well as your Shawshank Redemption. |
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This time
each year, we dispatch our legions to press screenings
for the annual New York Film Festival, and yearly we
must remind our readers that we don’t fete just because
NYFF’s the home team (though the proximity certainly
doesn’t hurt), but because here, in one place, is often
found the best of films yet to come. The majority of
the committee’s selections arrive with theatrical distribution
and the weight of prior critical praise, the ones that
don’t often leave with both. And though a few films
leave the fest each year broken at the hands of a particularly
cruel New York Times review, the reception given
the majority proves the NYFF for what it truly is—a
showcase more than a true festival, a role of which
it should be proud. This year’s crop was no exception,
and we hope we don’t overstep our bounds by labeling
the writing we’ve received on these challenging and
often controversial works as exceptional—if you want
to read some of the best writing we’ve read on film
anywhere, skip right to Manderlay, The Sun,
Regular Lovers—really any of the articles within
that section.
We’re also taking a bit of time to put a spotlight on
Kiyoshi Kurosawa on the event of the long-delayed theatrical
release of his now-classic Pulse. Given the heft
of the rest of the issue, we’ve had to be brief, but
we wanted Kiyoshi-san, and our readers to know we were
thinking of him. Start with Paul Matthews’s introductory
note and interview, and dive in from there.
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