Re: This is why people hate critics.
by
Texwiz
01/05/2009, 4:41 PM #
I love how I can throw out a hastily worded, ill considered screed, based on some writer's having pissed me off on a day when everything pisses me off, and come back a day or two later to find a bunch of thoughtful, intelligent replies. And nobody called me an idiot, at least not directly.
What it really comes down to is that I have a love/hate relationship with all critics. My real point (what I was clumsily trying to get at in my original post) is that many people are pretty much like me. We are intelligent and thoughtful consumers of movies, books, music, basically all the stuff that critics write about, but, unlike critics, we don't spend our lives devoted to films, books or music. We don't read the NY Times Literary Supplement every week and rush down to the bookstore to get the first copy of the new book by Dave Eggers or Salmon Rushdie or whoever is currently hot on the lit scene. We don't troll around on Pitchfork for an hour and a half a day wondering which new indie wunderkind is currently the most brilliant. And we don't haunt the Angelica for all the latest film fest entries, see three or four movies a week and dissect them over coffee with our film nut buddies.
Granted, some of you may do just that. That's what you're into, and that's great, but understand that you are in the minority compared to the general American public. As are critics, and therein lies the rub. They view films (or books, or music) in a fundamentally different way than I do. This different level of experience does give them an expertise that is required of those who would rate and expound on films. But it also colors their perceptions.
That is why I will stick to my statement that a critic's primary job (at least those who write for mainstream newspapers, magazines and websites) is to tell me, not simply whether they liked the film or not, but tell me enough about why they liked or disliked it to help me know whether I would like it or not, because (unlike some of you, apparently) I really don't have the time (or the inclination) to watch several movies a week, especially if I'm likely to dislike a number of them. I have to ration my attention and a good critic helps me to do that.
Someone did make a very good point that you have to make a determination if a given critic is too far away from your own sensibilities. My sensibilities include a marked lack of patience for movies that trade overmuch in subtlety. I don't mean I dislike subtlety, or that I prefer to be talked down to or hit over the head with the point, but that one irritating trait of a number of indie films I've seen is that they seem to feel that if there isn't a lot of confusion as to what the hell is going on, then they are being too heavy handed. I like for movies to make sense. Ambiguity, intelligence and depth are not necessarily synonymous. I also dislike overly serious films. I don't mind if your subject is deadly serious, but if you address it without any shred of a sense of humor, then it lacks the humanity I look for. Life is funny, even when you're about to die.