AestheticsCriticsHousekeepingself-indulgence

The Steven St. Croix/Harold Hecuba syndrome

By July 26, 2010No Comments

I might as well just come right out with it, people: I’ve been in a bit of a funk lately. Dunno if it’s the heat, or the fact that I’m get­ting behind in my work because my plasma dis­play’s still broken, or because I can­not count among my read­er­ship any author­ized Hitachi parts and ser­vices pro­viders who are fans to the extent that they would offer to repair my plasma dis­play for free, or some com­bin­a­tion of all of the above. (And by the way, many thanks to the read­ers who have taken such sym­pathy to my plight that they’ve hit the tip jar—it def­in­itely helps.)

Who am I kid­ding? It’s all of that, but it’s not only all of that. 

The oth­er day, some online exploration—which I’m begin­ning to think is just nev­er, ever a good idea—directed me to some­thing that I would have oth­er­wise avoided, that is, Armond White’s review, in the every-issue-thinner-than-the-last New York Press, of Todd Solondz’s Life During Wartime, a film I admire sub­stan­tially. Now I under­stand that, around the time of Transformers 2 if not well before, Armond traded a more-or-less con­ven­tion­ally “con­trari­an” stance for an extremely aggress­ive Bizarro World (“Us do oppos­ite of all earthly things!”) approach to film cri­ti­cism; it was no longer enough to con­demn that which was largely embraced by the crit­ic­al com­munity, such as it was; White now took up as his duty the slath­er­ing of thor­oughly irra­tion­al praise on cer­ti­fi­able dogshit. None of this would mat­ter if people just stopped pay­ing atten­tion to White entirely, but one pecu­li­ar bit of blow­back from the situ­ation is that White’s praise for a par­tic­u­lar film can now be used as a cudgel against that pic­ture by those who aren’t as enthused about it. Hence, someone such as myself can be put into a pos­i­tion of defend­ing Solondz’s film not only from attacks against it, but from White’s praise of it. An odd, inter­est­ing situ­ation, to be sure. 

White’s review, of course, is worth­less from word one, with which he begins to evoke a film he did­n’t like, Todd Haynes’ I’m Not There. Solondz dec­or­ates the dorm room of one of Wartime’s char­ac­ters with a poster for that film; White reads this as Solondz for­giv­ing “the thief who pur­loined then degraded his [Solondz’s] highly ori­gin­al concept.” Welcome to Armond’s world, where if he likes what you do, it means you must think exactly like him. Christ, what a din­gus. And on it goes, with one of the most thor­oughly simplist­ic read­ings of the film’s explor­a­tions of the themes of for­giv­ing and for­get­ting, and a lot of mean­ing­less sen­tences along the lines of “The grav­ity of Solondz’s satir­ic­al bent—a mod­ern ver­sion of what Bellows’ gen­er­a­tion joked about as Jewish guilt—adds uni­ver­sal­ity to his obser­va­tion of the con­tem­por­ary con­di­tion.” That phrase “Bellow’s generation”—it still makes my head spin. White means Saul Bellow, although he might as well be talk­ing about Dr. Alfred Bellows, the I Dream Of Jeanie char­ac­ter, for all the fuck­ing sense he’s mak­ing. He wraps up the review by say­ing of the film “as an expres­sion of mod­ern com­pas­sion, it’s geni­us.” And then Mr. Modern Compassion begins his Salt notice by sneer­ing at Angelina Jolie’s “Benetton brood” of adop­ted chil­dren. (He must be a trifle wor­ried about the fate of his cur­rent, dimin­ish­ing semi-legit berth, because the rest of the review reads for an audi­tion for Big Hollywood, with its excor­i­ation of “Hollywood lib­er­als” who “exploit their priv­ilege, defam­ing America, under­min­ing nation­al con­fid­ence and care­lessly tri­fling in polit­ics,” blah, blah, fuck­ing blah. Again: what a din­gus. Also, I can­’t wait until he finds out what Big Hollywood pays its contributors.)

So there was that, and I thought that maybe I could cobble a rel­at­ively amus­ing post out of it. Or not. And shortly there­after, as I began to, with some slight but dis­tinct rue, mull over the gen­er­al futil­ity of the reviewing-the-review idea, I began to come across vari­ous bits of online reac­tion to a neg­at­ive New York Times review of the film Audrey the Trainwreck, which had its New York première on Friday at Brooklyn’s ReRun Gastropub Cinema. “NYT review of Audrey The Trainwreck gives voice to acid reflux in writ­ten form,” sniffed Ray “Charley” Pride on his Twitter feed. (For the record, my gen­er­al feel­ing about Mr. Pride finds its pre­cise artic­u­la­tion in Miles Davis’ descrip­tion of Symphony Sid.) The more intel­lec­tu­ally con­geni­al and estim­able Richard Brody, after a descrip­tion of the film that is typ­ic­ally deft but skates pretty close to the spe­cial plead­ing area while try­ing to build a straw man out of what most people would call craft or pro­fes­sion­al­ism, also notes the Times review, and calls it “shame­ful;” not­ing that its review­er, Mike Hale, describes the film’s per­spect­ive as “con­des­cen­sion mas­quer­ad­ing as obser­va­tion,” Brody coun­ters “an apt descrip­tion of his review.” Aha, the old “I know you are, but what am I?” trick! And finally, there was the inev­it­able, and inev­it­ably re-tweeted,“Can I have Mike Hale’s job? Because he sucks.” Ha ha ha ha ha, wish­ing for some­body’s unem­ploy­ment is fun! (And one once again con­tem­plates money. And won­ders wheth­er these not-at-all self-satisfied snark maes­tros know what the New York Times pays its lower-level staffers and freel­an­cers. I recall, twenty or so years ago, doing the requis­ite num­ber of mother-impressing Arts & Leisure pieces for the Old Gray Lady and then defect­ing with nary a second thought to the New York Daily News, not just because Elizabeth Pochoda was a dif­fi­cult per­son to say no to, but because the pay was sub­stant­ively better.)

Understand, incid­ent­ally, that this isn’t about Audrey the Trainwreck, which I haven’t seen, and which, if I do see it, I will likely be happy to form and per­haps even artic­u­late an opin­ion on. It’s about my being put off by the insu­lar and cliqueish wagon-circling in response to a neg­at­ive review of the thing, and to the adoles­cent mix of resent­ment and tri­umphal­ism in that response: “Aww, the big bad New York Times did­n’t like our raw, hon­est, no-budget, maybe-mumblecore movie. Well it fig­ures, because they SUCK any­way.” Whereas had Mike Hale loved Audrey, it’d be all “Yay! We got a rave review in the Times!” and no men­tion, of course, of the ines­cap­able fact that Hale is to Times movie review­ers as, by the lights of Guy Woodhouse, Dr. C.C. Hill is to OB/GYNs. It’s just as intel­lec­tu­ally deformed as any Roger L. Simon rant about the “lame stream media,” when you come right down to it. I stopped read­ing Simon, Ann Althouse, and Glenn Reynolds, some time back, and it did won­ders for my san­ity. To stop read­ing this sort of thing is a bit more of a chal­lenge, as I am, so to speak, in the same room with these people.

And so, yes­ter­day after­noon, I des­paired some­what, tak­ing off from “What’s the fuck­ing point?” and spiralling down from there; and my thoughts turned, as they fre­quently do, to David Foster Wallace, and to this pas­sage from his essay “Big Red Son,” describ­ing the first pieces of “ran­dom spat­ter” he exper­i­ences on enter­ing the “Adult CES expo” in January of 1998:

A second-tier Arrow Video star­let in a G‑string poses for a photo, forked dorsally over the knee of a mor­bidly obese cell­phone retail­er from sub­urb­an Philadelphia. The guy tak­ing the pic­ture, whose CES nametag says Hi and that his name is Sherm, addresses the star­let as “babe” and asks her to read­just so as to ‘give us a little more bush down there.’ An Elegant Angel star­let with poly­res­in wings attached to her back is eat­ing a Milky Way bar while she signs video boxes. Actor Steven St. Croix is stand­ing near the Caballero Home Video booth, say­ing to no one in par­tic­u­lar “Let me out of here, I can­’t wait to get out of here.”

The real per­son who appears in Wallace’s essay under the pseud­onym “Harold Hecuba” was/is my friend Evan Wright, who gives a brief account of how he came to meet Wallace in the intro­duc­tion to his latest col­lec­tion of journ­al­ism, Hella Nation. (Also for the record, I, who appear in Wright’s account as well, have an entirely dif­fer­ent recol­lec­tion of cer­tain events described therein, which is some­thing I have to take up with Evan some time, and is of no import here.) Wright, who at the time of this meet­ing was on the staff of Hustler magazine, and try­ing rather des­per­ately to get leave the staff of Hustler magazine, also dis­cusses his ini­tial befuddle­ment at some of Wallace’s ref­er­ences (the two in fact became pretty fast friends not too long after first meet­ing, though), as here:

I spent sev­er­al days try­ing unsuc­cess­fully to decipher the mean­ing of his ref­er­ence to Hecuba, tor­tur­ing myself over my inab­il­ity to decode the mean­ing of the great author’s ref­er­ence. Finally I called Wallace. He was stunned that I did­n’t get who Harold Hecuba was. “He’s, you know, the Phil Silvers char­ac­ter who guest stars on Gilligan’s Island,” Wall
ace explained. “I thought you would get it. You don’t feel bad about it?”

Why should I?”

You should­n’t,” Wallace said. “Hecuba’s on stuck on the island like every­body else. He gets off of it. Makes it back to the main­land, I think, that is, if I have my Gilligan’s Island ref­er­ences right.

And you see where this is going. I thought of a friend of mine, who’s writ­ten quite a bit of ter­rific­ally acute cri­ti­cism, who’s soon leav­ing the coun­try for pretty much good, and of a con­ver­sa­tion he recoun­ted to me, one that he had with an ostens­ible Bright Young Critical thing who’s a big boost­er for “youth” and also some­thing of a pre­sump­tu­ous high­brow wan­nabe, at least by my friend’s lights (the fel­low has some cham­pi­ons; I’m not one). And when the ques­tion came up as to why my friend was mov­ing from New York, he said to the Bright Young Thing, “You.” And he was­n’t entirely kid­ding. Sounds a little extreme, I know. But I got where my friend was com­ing from. 

And so it was in this par­tic­u­lar state of mind late yes­ter­day after­noon that I got myself ready to attend a party…hosted by a couple of film writers. And to be pop­u­lated by dozens more. Some of whom have Twitter accounts. What incred­ible irony, right? And both My Lovely Wife and I had a lovely time. The people were great, the food ter­rif­ic, the cine­mat­ic ambi­ent video amus­ing (The Big Cube and Mahogany both got play). Yes, my ego was fed—I heard “I’m a big fan!” and “You look great!” more than once. But even without that, I would have con­cluded that for at least a few hours, the island, at least this par­tic­u­lar corner of it, was­n’t really at all a bad place to be. And that the no-doubt ulti­mately Sisyphean efforts enga­ging against its more ques­tion­able tra­di­tions was worth waging for such moments of illu­min­a­tion, res­pite, and pleasure. 

So what can a poor indi­vidu­al do? Lighten up, prob­ably. Fight fire with fire, maybe. Try to have some fun with the whole thing, why not? Get his ass in gear to make the two p.m. press screen­ing of Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore, abso­lutely. 

There’s no guar­an­tee I’ll be bask­ing in any such an after­glow at this time next week, though…

No Comments

  • otherbill says:

    That SALT review is just astound­ing. The best part is that he loads it with howl­ers like “an onscreen career based on frivol­ous or fatu­ous treach­ery” and then dwarfs them all by pro­pos­ing that we’re all gonna recall two lines of dia­logue from the second TOMB RAIDER flick.

  • LexG says:

    Steven St. Croix used to be a dead ringer for Dane Cook.

  • Evelyn Roak says:

    There does seem to be a real mob men­tal­ity going on these days. Yes, it has always been that way to a degree. Perhaps it is just twit­ter and the imme­di­acy and cas­u­al­ness of cer­tain corners of the inter­net world that accen­tu­ates these once more dormant ele­ments but it is high­lighted none the less. Frankly, it is off put­ting. Not in a I am not at the party way, but in a lower­ing of esteem sense. Too many empty pro­clam­a­tions that come across as mak­ing sure one is heard regard­less of sub­stance or the interest of ideas asser­ted. The ease of being heard has only heightened its con­sequence. Of course this has long been the desire of many a writer; nev­er­the­less, acknow­ledg­ment seems to be emer­ging as an end itself.

  • The Jake Leg Kid says:

    Armond White is a con­trari­an in the same sense that an old man who pisses him­self in pub­lic because he just does­n’t give a shit any­more is a con­trari­an. While some might regard White as a mere douchebag, albeit a spec­tac­u­larly flam­ing example of the spe­cies, I’m com­pletely con­vinced that the man is authen­tic­ally men­tally ill. As such, White’s weekly NY PRESS-hosted battles with the voices in his head have become far too depress­ing to read. Some day I fully expect an out­ré pub­lish­er – Feral House, per­haps? – to col­lect White’s reviews in book form and mar­ket them as an out­sider art-style chron­icle of a lun­at­ic’s los­ing battle with schizo­phrenia to White’s much-hated hipsters.

  • John M says:

    Glenn, I think Hale kinda deserves any and all shit he gets for that review–and it seems to me, you fly off the rails pretty fast when a crit­ic, espe­cially a young­ish crit­ic, blasts a movie you love, no? To each his own and all that, but Hale really seems to miss the tone of the movie entirely, almost willfully.
    I’m in the tank, hap­pily. I saw it as SXSW, sur­roun­ded my films that got much big­ger hype (Cold Weather zzzzzz), and was happy to finally see a movie by an actu­al adult. It is a ragged-looking movie–it’s under con­trol visu­ally, but rarely does it pull its own visu­al ideas off. But the script, per­form­ances, and atten­tion to detail are any­thing but ragged–it’s a remark­ably, uncan­nily layered por­trait of sim­mer­ing people. From Hale: “aggress­ively incon­sequen­tial”? Sounds like Truffaut’s entire filmo­graphy, if you want to see it that way. Calling the film “mumble­core” is, as usu­al, use­less and lazy. Hale’s review just reads like a crabby little fart.
    And if a bad notice in the Times strikes some as more offens­ive, it’s because it is more offens­ive. More people read it. More dam­age is done. Doesn’t mat­ter how respec­ted or known Mike Hale is…it’s the New York Times, so atten­tion is paid. Meaning: if you write for the Times, at least show up for work.
    Anyway, I do hope you check it out. Very worthwhile.

  • EOTW says:

    I’M NOT THERE was my favor­ite film in the year it was released. Of course, I am a lifelong Dylan fan, so all of the “winks” wer clear to me and it felt like such a vis­ion. Few films have felt like they were speak­ing dir­ectly to me.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @ John M.: I will check it out at the first viable oppor­tun­ity (I tend to avoid pubs these days, gastro or no). Your account of it is one of the more enga­ging descriptions/defenses of it I’ve read. As for Hale deserving “any and all shit,” I dis­agree. He may deserve some shit—and your argu­ments are of a high­er caliber than the non-arguments that I cited. But I insist that “Can I have Mike Hale’s job? Because he sucks” is utterly lame. And for ostens­ible pro­fes­sion­al Karina Longworth to “join in” on the “fun” by re-tweeting it or whatever it’s called is just…well, typ­ic­al of Karina Longworth.
    I “fly off the rails pretty fast when a crit­ic, espe­cially a young­ish crit­ic” blasts a movie I love? Um, I think I resemble that remark. Not the fly­ing off the rails part—although I do believe I’ve been hold­ing myself in check in that respect bet­ter than I have previously—but the “espe­cially a young­ish crit­ic.” I don’t have any­thing against young­ish crit­ics. I have a prob­lem with stu­pid, pre­sump­tu­ous, unc­tu­ous, know-something-ish pseud crit­ics, is all. If they hap­pen to by “young­ish,” well, that’s just the way the cook­ie crumbles. (Hell, Armond White is, I believe, at least a few years my seni­or.) The asser­tion “If Werner Herzog dir­ec­ted ‘American Beauty,’ the res­ult­ing product might look some­thing like any giv­en Todd Solondz movie” would be just as mean­ing­less and unsup­port­able had it been writ­ten by the 94-year-old Stanley Kauffmann as it is com­ing from its actu­al author, the young-and-let-him-tell-you-all-about ‑the-future-of-film-criticism-and-his-place-in-it Eric Kohn. But then, you see, Stanley Kauffmann did not, and most likely would not, make the asser­tion. Like I said, that’s just the way the cook­ie crumbles.

  • It’s easy (and con­veni­ent) for oth­ers to paint these as gen­er­a­tion­al clashes, Glenn, but I can­’t say yours have ever struck me as such.
    And for what it’s worth – I haven’t seen the film, or the review – Mike, whom I used to work with (and is actu­ally a good fel­low, although that’s besides the point of this dis­cus­sion) is prob­ably in his late 40s these days.

  • @John M
    And by “oth­ers,” I real­ized as I pos­ted that, I should hasten to add I don’t mean YOU.
    I mean oth­er writers at oth­er sites who often seem to cast crit­ic­al feuds as young-vs-old, web-vs-print, unpaid-vs-professional, kids-on-the-lawn-vs-old-man-with-kids-on-his-lawn.
    As opposed to this blog, which tends to see the fights as simply people-who-make-their-case-vs.-people-who-don’t-make-their-case.

  • Tom Russell says:

    Let me echo Mr. Whitty’s sen­ti­ments: it does, in the end, come down to case-making, and– main­tain­ing as I do a rather act­ive pres­ence on twit­ter– I’ve made the acquaint­ance of a few crit­ics, mostly young­ish, who bristle quite a bit when their abil­ity to make their cases are chal­lenged, or when you ask them to sup­port their argu­ments with, well, argu­ments. If they do try to make their case, and they’re of the Brilliant Contrarian bent, they inev­it­ably obfus­cate the mat­ter with the sort of dense impen­et­rable non­sense babble that you’ll find in Armond White’s reviews. When that hap­pens, I gen­er­ally don’t fur­ther it any farther, as my grand­moth­er is fond of saying.
    Sometimes, I think the babble is because there’s simply no there there, that they aren’t nearly as smart as they think they are, and in those cases our acquaint­ance­ship does­n’t last par­tic­u­larly long or go par­tic­u­larly deep, as they really think they are some bril­liant new voice, et cet­era, and those prone to a cer­tain unpleas­ant smarminess.
    But in oth­er cases, I think they’re bluff­ing: pulling as much impressive-sounding bull­puckey out of their hat and pil­ing it up as high and haphaz­ard as they can in a des­per­ate, tee­ter­ing bid to sound intel­li­gent. They know– or at least fear– that they’re not as smart as they seem on the sur­face. Such folk are des­per­ately afraid of being found out, their intel­lec­tu­al jenga blocks crash­ing about their heads for all to see. The sad part is, under­neath this des­per­a­tion, there’s often a real intel­li­gence at work– one that might flour­ish if they wer­en’t try­ing too hard and if their intern­al bull­shit detect­or was more finely-calibrated. I know that there are times when I’ve caught myself try­ing too hard to sound smart or clev­er– being someone who barely gradu­ated from High School, it’s safe to say I have a com­plex about that– and I’ve stopped myself before I let my mouth over­load my ass; I know there are times when I haven’t caught myself, and if that hap­pens in these parts, I hope the good folks here will call me on it.
    The people in that second group I feel a cer­tain and not-surprising empathy for, but there’s also some hope there, because I think it is actu­ally some­thing that’s age-specific, or, at the very least, it’s some­thing that’s more com­mon in youth and that can be out­grown as one matures– unlike that first group. The only great thing about that kind of almost crip­pling self-doubt is that you’re nev­er not look­ing inward, nev­er not ques­tion­ing or rethink­ing; that first group, on the oth­er hand, nev­er stops look­ing at them­selves long enough to ques­tion their con­cep­tion of their own bril­liance, let alone to stop spew­ing the vap­id bull­shit that comes with it– and yes, look­ing inside one­self and look­ing at one­self really are two very dif­fer­ent things.

  • Russ H says:

    I also groaned at the arm’s length engage­ment of Hale’s review and, like John, found Audrey to be if not an out-and-out great movie, a good movie worthy of spe­cif­ic cri­tique. I found Ross’ writ­ing and edit­ing (a reverbing chor­us of routine: the sound of a razor, a room­mate, an inter­net date, a vol­ley­ball spike) to be sharp and delib­er­ately organ­ized. Outside of a beau­ti­fully writ­ten and pre­formed couplet of scenes to end the movie, the indi­vidu­al moments can be slip­pery and off-putting, though as the film begins to tumble upon itself–revisiting places, char­ac­ters, and later memor­ies– you begin to feel the film invad­ing a main char­ac­ter who Hale cor­rectly describes as “dull and closed off,” though it’s hardly the indict­ment he intends. It’s a sturdy, care­ful examination.
    And, for what it’s worth, Brody has just respon­ded via his blog. An inter­est­ing sample:
    “Mike Hale brings to “Audrey the Trainwreck” a set of pre­ju­dices regard­ing the dir­ect­or Frank V. Ross’s sup­posed sym­path­ies or lack there­of and, in gen­er­al, regard­ing the notion of sym­path­et­ic and unsym­path­et­ic char­ac­ters, that has little to do with the artist­ic mer­it of a film, but that may be use­ful to com­mer­cial pro­du­cers; I’d say it reflects a pecu­li­arly Hollywood-centric view of the cinema, except that the best of Hollywood’s film­makers man­age to work their way around such pre­ju­dices as well.”
    Read more http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/movies/2010/07/de-gustibus.html#entry-more#ixzz0upWSYgAP

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @ Russ: One of the many things I like about Richard is that he’s ever ready, will­ing, and abso­lutely able to rise to crit­ic­al chal­lenges; to get into the ring, so to speak. His response is inter­est­ing and worth­while; I am a little troubled/confused by his term “pros­per­ous insiders.” But I sup­pose I ought to address these issues in response to Richard himself…

  • SJ says:

    I see Glenn is a fan of Steve Brule.

  • Hauser Tann says:

    I don’t have any­thing against young­ish critics.”
    So there isn’t the slight­est tinge of ageism when you use an expres­sion such as Twitterific Kidcrits…?

  • brad says:

    I have also come to believe that Armond White is legit­im­ately men­tally ill, at the very least a severe case of bor­der­line per­son­al­ity dis­order with asso­ci­ated delu­sions of grandeur and para­noid tend­en­cies. Saying things like:
    “Salt will prob­ably be taken seriously—unlike the cred­ible and poet­ic his­tor­ic­al satire Jonah Hex.”
    could nev­er pos­sible eman­ate from a sane mind. It’s pure, unadul­ter­ated insan­ity. There is no pos­sible way he can really believe that, and if he thinks he does, he needs med­ic­a­tion. It’s no longer funny…it is sad and pathet­ic watch­ing him spir­al ever deep­er into the depths of nar­ciss­ist­ic insanity.

  • brad says:

    oh, and I chal­lenge White to write a review, good or bad, without tak­ing a shot at some­thing he does­n’t like. He can­’t do it. it’s all he has. he does­n’t review…he trolls. every single review he writes now does­n’t tell us a thing about the movie he’s sup­posedly dis­cuss­ing, it’s just an excuse to pigeon­hole ran­dom shots at things oth­er people like that he thinks is stu­pid and proves every oth­er crit­ic that isn’t him is a “shill.” what a buffoon.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @ Hauser Tann: I believe you mean “Twitterific Kidcritz™.”
    I also believe that the oper­at­ive phrase here is “Fuck ’em if they can­’t take a joke.”
    “Ageism?” Really? You’re kid­ding, right? If not, I wanna get the num­ber of the wam­bu­lance you’re calling…

  • John M says:

    Glenn, thanks for the reply. I know you don’t have it out for young crit­ics, spe­cific­ally, but the young-vs-old issue does seem to rear its head here from time to time. Understandably, in this cli­mate. Seeing a movie you really respec­ted get passed on with a wave of a hand always feels like a viol­a­tion, and there’s a line between dif­fer­ent strokes and hey-asshole-watch-a-little-more-carefully-next-time. The viol­a­tion feels even sharp­er when the movie is low-budget and rel­at­ively hard to market.
    Regarding Twitter, ser­i­ously, does any­thing good come out of that fuck­ing hot mess of cross-currents? I hate read­ing it–don’t want to join in, but can­’t fol­low the threads, and most of it’s just echo­ing. I’m sure it’s fun and all, but I’ve yet to see how it enhances the world of film cri­ti­cism or pop cri­ti­cism or dis­cus­sion or mor­als or.…
    Since I’m get­ting all Andy Rooney, I’ll say I’m also skep­tic­al of this movie-pub concept, but if it gets people interested–which is a real damn chore these days–I say, fine. But the place sounds a little gimmicky–car seats? I’d still love to see an Alamo Draft House style house in NYC.
    And yeah, I over­stated the shit-taking that Hale deserves. After all, he appears to have been work­ing under some pretty major space lim­it­a­tions. There just seemed to be so much short­hand there–no attempt to engage with the film what­so­ever. As I said, I’m bunch­ing the bed­sheets up to my chest, cuz I feel violated.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @ John M.: Well, as you see, there can tend to be some mis­un­der­stand­ing, with respect to this issue, as to wheth­er I’m being joc­u­lar or not. Obviously (or at least I thought), “Twitterific Kidcritz™” was a joke. But also obvi­ously it had some­thing to do with the real world, the way that young­er crit­ics (or film review­ers) were quick­er to embrace the cited format. Of course Ebert’s made them all look like pikers since then. If I seem sens­it­ive to the idea that I dis­like young­er film crit­ics, it’s because I feel that when I could, back in the day, I did a lot to encour­age them, that is, I gave more than a couple some pay­ing work. I think Christopher Kelly, Peter Debruge would tell you that. Even Aaron Hillis, with whom I do not cur­rently enjoy the rosi­est of rela­tions, might allow that that was the case.
    What does get up my nose, and was the source of more than one verbal scuffle with Nathan Lee, is the notion that youth is a pos­it­ive value in and of itself for a crit­ic, and the implic­a­tion that older crit­ics need to get out of the way to make room for young­er ones. “And do what?” is one obvi­ous ques­tion this brings up. I should like to stick around long enough to see some of those who’ve agit­ated in that dir­ec­tion reach a Certain Age them­selves, and poll them about their feel­ings at that point. I won­der if they’ll have the cour­age of their feisty, right­eous convictions.
    And of course there are, I admit, quite a few folks I’d like to see JUST LEAVE. But that’s anoth­er story, and one that is prob­ably no use to tell…

  • John M says:

    …the notion that youth is a pos­it­ive value in and of itself for a crit­ic, and the implic­a­tion that older crit­ics need to get out of the way to make room for young­er ones…”
    A young crit­ic’s way of ration­al­iz­ing his/her own career­ist impulses, is what that sounds like. Age, and the wis­dom that comes along with it–what could be more cru­cial to a roun­ded dis­cus­sion of the arts? Unfortunately, only some critics–Hoberman, Ebert (mostly), Brody, your­self, a few others–remember or even care to sharpen their tools with any kind of reg­u­lar­ity. So “old crit­ic” comes to equal “Rex Reed.”
    Who really needs to be euth­an­ized, pro­fes­sion­ally. Really, that guy’s an angry, hor­rible fuck­head, who still, at the age of 126, has no idea how to read a film.

  • Evelyn Roak says:

    It is unfor­tu­nate that in defend­ing the intim­a­tion of veer­ing towards build­ing a straw man Richard Brody decides the best defense is to jump in whole-hog in said straw man con­struc­tion . He goes back to the well of his Cyrus defense, the broadly painted cari­ca­tures of those who appre­ci­ate clas­sic­al Hollywood and the oppos­ing crit­ics cap­able of break­ing from these oppress­ive stric­tures to see the “sim­pli­city, vul­ner­ab­il­ity, dir­ect­ness, and imme­di­acy” of films like Cyrus (the odd implic­a­tion that a Hollywood film can‘t do such a thing. Does he not see these qual­it­ies in his praise of Funny People? An assess­ment I agree with, by the way). Simply, if either of these crit­ics exist, and that is a large if, they are hardly worth ones time. He has con­struc­ted two broad char­ac­ter­iz­a­tions and set up a 12 round main event, between two ima­gin­ary fight­ers, where there need not be one. It comes across as pro­ject­ing upon the dis­agree­ing crit­ic an ideo­logy that they don’t sub­scribe to for the sake of hav­ing a lar­ger tar­get. Frankly, it seems disin­genu­ous and Ray Carney-esque. There is always the off chance that they may in good faith dis­like a movie you liked. Crime of all crimes.
    (I have pos­ted this com­ment, slightly adjus­ted at Richard Brody’s New Yorker blog)

  • haice says:

    Who would have thought the day would come when amus­ing crap like HANNIE CAULDER would be referred to be a “lost treasure“in a DVD review in a major enter­tain­ment magazine?

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    Well, you know, they really don’t make ’em like they used to…

  • Andrew Wyatt says:

    Glenn:
    Don’t des­pair. Your voice is needed more than ever in Times Like These. We here in the hin­ter­lands of Flyover Country need your eru­di­tion and your low tol­er­ance for bull­shit. Hell, if I was King of the World, I’d pay you a gen­er­ous sti­pend (plus a new plasma screen!) just to bang out two to three posts a day on whatever the hell tickles your fancy. You know, after I cured can­cer and all that.

  • jim emerson says:

    Glenn, you settled the issue defin­it­ively long ago when you wrote:
    “Here’s a chal­lenge. Tell me what this sen­tence, from White’s review of the new ver­sion of “The Taking of Pelham 123,” means: “Audiences who enjoyed the ori­gin­al 1974 ‘Pelham 123’ took its grungy dan­ger­ous­ness as a real­ist­ic con­firm­a­tion of their own cit­izens’ dis­trust.” Now here’s the rub: I don’t want to know what you think it means, what you infer it means when you put it through your own per­son­al White decoder ring, no; I want to know what the words in the sen­tence as they are actu­ally writ­ten actu­ally mean. As, you know, an actu­al copy edit­or would under­stand them. Because an actu­al copy edit­or would tell you that the sen­tence is gibberish.…”
    That’s it. AW ceases to exist. There’s noth­ing more to say. That para­graph still gives me great joy, because it does to what’s-his-name what Martin Short’s por­tray­al of Howie Mandel in SCTV’s “Maudlin of the Night” did to HM. It makes him irrel­ev­ant. That AW could con­tin­ue to per­form in pub­lic makes him all the more pathet­ic. You have said what needed to be said – and all that needed to be said – about AW.

  • LexG says:

    Maybe we’d get some COOL NEW CRITICS if someone would hire ME.
    I don’t know what the fuck it takes. I got Poland and Wells in my corner, both HUGE fans and pro­moters of my writ­ing, Poland tried giv­ing me a column, Wells offered to help me, I got like 60–80 film crit­ics at any time fol­low­ing me on Twitter… How the fuck do you guys get PAID for this shit ever though?
    I want to GET PAID TO WATCH MOVIES, but it’s got to be more than I’m mak­ing at my day job, so I can­’t do it full time for UNDER 70K, but it’s import­ant to me to become a writer for a brief peri­od of time so I don’t have to go to a DAY JOB anymore.
    My day job is TRANSCRIBING MOVIES, which SUCKS DICK because stu­pid stu­di­os send their movies out for DVD prep like the week they come out or BEFORE, so every week­end I wanna see 4 movies but it’s a mad dash to see them before I have to WORK ON THEM, piece­meal and out of order and in black and white, at my shitty post job.
    If I could just be a full time crit­ic, I’d see the movies for free, would­n’t work a dumb day job, and would have ALL DAY to focus on my act­ing career, because I WANT TO BE FAMOUS and writ­ing is BORING AS FUCK and don’t you guys all kinda just secretly wish you were Leo or Joseph Gordon-Levitt instead of just WRITING ABOUT THEM?
    Either that or I need to sell a book of my rants, but I need a WINDFALL of like 75–100k so I can quit my tran­scrip­tion job and audi­tion for REALITY SHOWS.
    FAME IS GOD.

  • LexG says:

    And I’m‑a keep going, because it’s on top­ic and I DON’T CARE:
    You will NEVER con­vince me that a whole lot of you dudes are pos­sessed of some writ­ing geni­us that I can­’t muster. I got dudes on HE beg­ging me to write a book, I got POLAND, I got WELLS, ster­ling endorse­ments from DOZENS of oth­er guys… Yet I’m sad­dling sub­titling porn and tran­scrib­ing the 2014 TNT cut of Next Month’s Blockbuster like THIS WEEK, because you gotta do that shit NOW and des­troy the fuck out of the movie for the pos­t­house sad­sacks who MIGHT have wanted to see it. Yeah, tell me why a December release has to have the DVD com­pleted in FUCKING AUGUST, and I’ll be etern­ally grateful.
    But: I like ALL these dudes, so I’m only talk­ing harm­less smack, but you really gonna tell me Devin Faraci is some Hemingway-esque geni­us that he should­n’t be closed-captioning soap oper­as? Or Gilchrist, or JEN YAMATO, who seems like a sweet­heart but is just some TWOP‑y Twi-Hard, not exactly Sarris-level, or Kris Tapley, again, nice guy, but I REFUSE to believe any of them OR Poland, or, fuck, even Glenn is some EXALTED WARRIOR-POET, but there’s no room for my GENIUS Gonzo film crit­ic style and dis­tinct­ive, well-liked prose.
    And yet any time I try to par­lay it, nobody really gives a shit and I get like 6 views so it’s easi­er just to post on someone else’s blog. HOW CAN I GET A LEGIT, 75K CRITIC GIG? I deserve it more than ANYONE IN AMERICA, I am a bet­ter writer than Ken Turan, bet­ter writer than Armond, bet­ter writer than AO Scott, bet­ter writer than Dargis.
    I am a FUCKING GENIUS, and it is a NATIONAL DISGRACE that I’m stuck TAKING DICTATION for a liv­ing, when all you dicks get to go to JUNKETS and meet Dakota Fanning, when I’m fun­ni­er than ANYONE ON THE PLANET.
    GET ME A JOB.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @ LexG: Wow. Looks like you picked the wrong week/month/year/decade to aspire to be a paid film critic.
    Relative qual­ity of your prose aside, have you not noticed how things are work­ing nowadays? Even the folks in rel­at­ively secure pos­i­tions aren’t feel­ing all that secure. And THEY aren’t going to give up those pos­i­tions until you pry them from their cold, dead hands. And once their hands are cold/dead, you think the cor­por­ate mas­ters are going to be in a hurry to hire replace­ments at the same pay scale? No, I think not, baby puppy.
    Seriously—La Longworth has­n’t even been at her print job for a year, and already I see the chron­ic (albeit select­ive) over-sharer is whinging about how she’ll nev­er be able to pay back her stu­dent loans, boo-fricking hoo. And the LA Weekly pos­i­tion was con­sidered a CHERRY GIG. Think about it.

  • DUH says:

    @ LexG: I know you want to sound GONZO, but instead you sound like a char­ac­ter from _Miss Lonelyhearts_ if it was by Diablo Cody and ran seri­al­ized in Entertainment Weekly. I do not mean that as a compliment.

  • bgn says:

    @ LexG: if you really really want to be a paid film crit­ic for a major media source, my advice for you would be to get off the film cri­ti­cism kick and become a polit­ic­al pun­dit. Once you become fam­ous as a polit­ic­al pun­dit, you can write about any­thing you want on a reg­u­lar basis–even film. Hey, it worked for John Podhoretz, Ross Douthat & Steve Sailer; why should­n’t it work for you?

  • Jeff McMahon says:

    It hardly bears say­ing, but Lex, your prob­lem isn’t the qual­ity of your writ­ing, it’s your ter­rible work eth­ic and all-whining-all-the-time atti­tude. Poland gave you a shot, you were too lazy to make it work. End of story.
    Also, I still don’t under­stand how a single man who lives in the San Fernando Valley can be dis­sat­is­fied with a $70k annu­al paycheck. LEX, SWITCH JOBS WITH ME.

  • LexG says:

    Because my job entails HAVING MOVIES DESTROYED. It’s basic­ally same as if I did color-correction on upcom­ing releases, or did sound edit­ing, or tele­cine. For some idi­ot­ic reas­on, even though the DVDs don’t come out for 3–4 months after the­at­ric­al they do all the work on it either the WEEK OF RELEASE, or often WEEKS IN ADVANCE OF THEATRICAL.
    Think of all the prim­al form­at­ive movie exper­i­ences of your life, whatever they may be. Would you want to have seen Star Wars, or Lawrence of Arabia, or Blood Simple, or Thin Red Line, or Jaws, etc… for the first time A MONTH before they came out, on a 4‑inch WMP screen, tweak­ing them frame by frame, rewind­ing over and over, in black and white, often not even start­ing at the begin­ning, then hav­ing to QC the same brand-new movie up to 30, 40, 70 times with­in two weeks?
    It pays the bills (barely), but for a true movie lov­er, it’s a soul-deadening way to do so. My job is basic­ally like a die-hard Yankees fan hav­ing to see all the games on a two-inch screen STARTING at the ninth inning and work­ing back­wards, watch­ing it over the course of two weeks.

  • John M. says:

    Wait a minute, Lex makes 70K a year?
    Ah, so that’s the sound of sym­pathy fly­ing out the window.

  • bill says:

    Ah, so that’s the sound of sym­pathy nev­er mater­i­al­iz­ing in the first place.

  • LexG says:

    Meeting Dakota Fanning and Kristen Stewart at jun­kets > 70K.
    Seriously, you guys INTERVIEW FAMOUS PEOPLE. You get to MEET ACTRESSES and see their FEET close up, and I’m not even talk­ing about Glenn being in the same room as a BAREFOOT SASHA GREY. I’m talk­ing about dudes like McWeeny or Leydon or Gilchrist TALKING TO FAMOUS PEOPLE. That’s worth more than any paycheck on earth.
    I have NEVER spoken to a fam­ous per­son ever, unless Jeff Wells and former Atlanta Brave Bob Horner count. I WANT TO MEET AND TALK TO FAMOUS PEOPLE, and it is MIND BLOWING to me that a reg­u­lar dude like Drew, who used to work with me and is the same basic kinda guy as I am and not some SUPER POWERED BRAD PITT TYPE but just a reg­u­lar dude, IS ALWAYS Tweeting like, “Yep, just sat down with Abbie Cornish” like it’s some EVERYDAY FUCKING EVENT, and not the most super­nat­ur­al con­ver­gence of hap­pen­stance ever.
    I WANT TO INTERVIEW STARLETS. NOW.

  • John M. says:

    Ah, so that’s the sound of skep­ti­cism becom­ing aggrav­a­tion becom­ing a slight sym­pathy becom­ing a deep­er sym­pathy becom­ing revul­sion becoming…
    Lex, send me money now.

  • John M. says:

    I have NEVER spoken to a fam­ous per­son ever, unless Jeff Wells and former Atlanta Brave Bob Horner count.”
    Sentences like this are why I can­’t quite let you go, Lex.

  • Tom Russell says:

    I have to say, I liked LexG a lot more when he was just a skeevy guy going on about how “hot” so-and-so is. Something about his enthu­si­asm and style of expres­sion made it kind of amus­ing, if not bor­der­line endear­ing– in a “that’s still pretty creepy” kinda way.
    But I think as he’s expan­ded bey­ond his pre­vi­ously nar­row range, I’ve found his schtick a bit more tiresome.
    Just sayin’.

  • Chris O. says:

    @LexG: Wait, wait, wait… you were giv­en the chance to write/blog/contribute and you blew it off? Listen, if I can inter­view fam­ous people (and, uh, see Jenna Fischer and Jennifer Love Hewitt’s feet) from my corner of the world, you’ve nearly no excuses. Trust me, it only takes a teensy bit of eth­ic, ini­ti­at­ive and a will­ing­ness to do some things for free. Try, fail, *then* bitch about it. But the try­ing has to be, like, you know, for real and stuff.

  • Oliver C says:

    LexG, I much pre­ferred you when you pos­ted to the Criterion Forum.
    Actually, no – you were an irrit­at­ing, empty-headed fuck­wit over there as well. Fortunately you just pos­ted once before you wussed out (or got banned?) and left.
    To use your own phrase, “it’s like you don’t have the QC down yet or something.”

  • Michael Worrall says:

    Living in San Francisco, hear­ing someone com­plain about “only” mak­ing 70,000.00 a year hap­pens on a daily basis. I’ve met, talked, cor­res­pon­ded with many dir­ect­ors, cine­ma­to­graph­ers and film editors–my let­ter from Ken Russell is price­less and wish I could be in NYC to see him next week– without ever hav­ing a pro­fes­sion­al gig or mak­ing over 40,000.00, and still man­aged to live in San Francisco without any real discomfort.

  • LexG says:

    Hey, Tom Russell, you don’t have to worry about that prob­lem of yours anymore.
    “What prob­lem, Lex?” The prob­lem where you and your wifey’s lame blog has ZERO COMMENTS under every thread going back weeks, months on end, NOBODY read­ing it. ‘Cause you best believe I’m gonna be post­ing like fuck­ing crazy on there now that you’ve talked smack. I’m gonna unleash a fuck­ing firestorm on that bar­ren wasteland.
    Oliver, I don’t know or care who you are, but I have THREE COLLEGE DEGREES, one of them in Film, and I have the RINGING ENDORSEMENT of America’s top crit­ics as well as JAMES WOLCOTT. What do you have, a six-pack of Fresca and a BluRay play­er? I have the pul­pi­est, awe­somest writ­ing style in the entire film blo­go­sphere, and any­one who does­n’t think I’m funny? It’s a sure sign you’re a personality-free, no-humor, take-everything-too-seriously beardo douchebag who could­n’t make a fuck­ing blog post­ing inter­est­ing, let alone writ­ing any­thing any­one would ever want to read. Point me to some of your cogent film ana­lys­is and if I can stay awake, I’ll give it a fair shake. The mere fact that you fre­quent a dork­hole as insu­lar and lame as that jack­off Criterion board sug­gests a dis­tinct lack of humor or awesomeness.
    I’m sorry I’m so much more enter­tain­ing than any of you no-names, but maybe try DEVELOPING A PERSONALITY. Any of you guys do OPEN MIKE NIGHT? Comedy? Acting? Or do you just dryly ana­lyze movies with an air of smug, intel­lec­tu­al detachment.
    The key to GREAT CRITICISM is the crit­ic WANTS TO FUCK THE ACTRESSES, wants to BE THE ACTOR. Movies are VISCERAL AND EMOTIONAL, they are NOT intel­lec­tu­al. You guys can spin whatever ten-cent words make you feel like Robin Wood view­ing cinema through the jaun­diced eye of Marxist/feminist the­ory, but that’s all a lot of bull­shit, and all ANYONE wants to hear is MARION COTILLARD GIVES ME A BONER, I WANT TO PLANT AN INCEPTION INSIDE HER, if you know what I mean.
    Anyone who disses the Lexman bet­ter come equipped with a fuck­ing MOUNTAIN OF EVIDENCE that you’re more tal­en­ted or fun­ni­er than me… Otherwise you’re just what the Internet was for: Dull people feel­ing emboldened.

  • Nicolas Leblanc says:

    Here’s an idea LexG :
    Write down your rants, and weave them and your story ‑your quest for fame and the ador­ing gazes of mil­lions and shar­ing the air of the Olympian gods of Hollywood- into a nar­rat­ive. Fictionalize it a bit : change the names, add a pos­it­ive fem­in­ine char­ac­ter, tack on a tra­gic end­ing where the char­ac­ter learns how fool­ish were his dreams. Get it to a good copy editor.
    There, if you man­age to get pub­lished, there’s a good chance your nov­el will be hailed as a har­row­ing look at a deluded soul poisoned by soci­ety, as well as an indict­ment of fame culture.
    And then maybe, it gets a Hollywood treat­ment. With fam­ous people in every part! A vastly tal­en­ted super­star play­ing your sur­rog­ate and who­ever­’s the it-girl that year play­ing the com­pas­sion­ate young lady who cares for the anti­hero. And you get to meet them! Maybe you’ll get to ask the lead­ing lady to show you her feet!
    It’s a long shot, but you can try.
    (As for me, I love movies but don’t have a job that’s related to this pas­sion, and I live in a teeny apart­ment with my fam­ily in a mod­est area of a French ban­lieue, with an income for the house­hold that’s a tad below 20.000$. So, what you’re com­plain­ing about is bey­ond me.)

  • LexG says:

    There, if you man­age to get pub­lished, there’s a good chance your nov­el will be hailed as a har­row­ing look at a deluded soul poisoned by soci­ety, as well as an indict­ment of fame culture.”
    I like the rest of your post, but the above? Fuck that. OOOH, we’re all so “above” fame cul­ture. That’s bull­shit. If every hick weight­lift­er from Milwaukee gets his 15 minutes via The Bachelor or Big Brother now, why do I– or you– have to be stuck being “too smart” for all that? You’re not and I’m not.
    I have wanted to be fam­ous since I was EIGHT YEARS OLD. I con­sider my life an abject fail­ure because I’m not an act­or, because I’m not in movies, because there’s no movie where I, LexG, am dir­ec­ted by Tony Scott and back­lit by Venetian blinds in a smokey room while pound­ing Trevor Rabin music blasts on the soundtrack and I hold a .45 like Axel Foley does when the title card for BEVERLY HILLS COP 2 comes up.
    I’m bit­ter and jeal­ous that CHACE CRAWFORD makes a liv­ing being drooled over, gets to act in a Schumacher movie about coke and do scenes with 50 Cent and gets to be lit flatteringly.
    Everything shy of that is TOTAL BULLSHIT, and I don’t see how ANY OF YOU can ever have ONE SECOND OF HAPPINESS if you are not AN ACTOR. Family? Fuck fam­ily. You don’t need a fam­ily. Job? Fuck a job. Religion? HAHAHAHAHAHAHA SUCKER.
    If you aren’t fam­ous, you’re a piece of shit and your life SUCKS DICK. The soon­er I motiv­ate every­one on this plan­et to stop being com­pla­cent and accept­ing of that fact, the bet­ter I’ll be doing my job. YOU HAVE NO REASON TO BE HAPPY. Except for Glenn Kenny because HE WAS IN A MOVIE DIRECTED BY SODERBERGH, and star­ring my favor­ite porn actress.
    I am legit­im­ately sui­cid­al in my day to day life, and I hon­estly do not know HOW OR WHY I will go on if I don’t get fam­ous soon, or at least get to be a WORKING ACTOR. Something I can­’t do if I have to be in a FUCKING OFFICE 10 hours a day to pay my expens­ive rent and debts.
    But NO ONE is above fame. Famous people are the BEST PEOPLE IN THE WORLD, and I want fame more than ANYTHING. I would glee­fully and gladly sell out any and every per­son on this plan­et to get fam­ous. In my mind I AM GOD, and oth­er people are just extras, and I have ZERO care or empathy for ANYBODY ELSE on this plan­et. I am an utter loner and oth­er than chicks I want to fuck, there is NO ONE on this plan­et I would­n’t fuck over to get famous.

  • Jeff McMahon says:

    This is the same crap you’ve been spout­ing for lit­er­ally YEARS now. Shit or get off the pot, as they say.

  • LexG says:

    Kenny, tell Soderbergh he should make a movie about me.
    Seriously, it would be an awe­some movie.

  • Nicolas Leblanc says:

    In my mind I AM GOD, and oth­er people are just extras, and I have ZERO care or empathy for ANYBODY ELSE on this plan­et. I am an utter loner and oth­er than chicks I want to fuck, there is NO ONE on this plan­et I would­n’t fuck over to get famous.”
    Yeah, for instance, in your hypo­thet­ic­al nov­el, this para­graph should be the subt… WHAAAAAAT???!!!

  • brad says:

    any­time any­one tries this hard to con­vince every­one else how awe­some he is it becomes instantly obvi­ous that he is noth­ing more than a pos­ter­boy for Douchebag Monthly. Lex, you aren’t awe­some. You aren’t funny. You can some­times be slightly amus­ing, but being truly funny and cool requires a modic­um of humil­ity. You are a raging ball of douchey self-righteousness that is no fun­ni­er than that fuck­t­wit that wrote those stor­ies about old girl­friends that became that awful movie. Like him, you are noth­ing but a mean-spirited whiny bitch with just enough intel­li­gence to be dan­ger­ous and think you know it all, when in fact you aren’t even close. Hang it up kid…be thank­ful you have any job, because insuf­fer­able pricks are a dime a dozen.

  • LexG says:

    brad,
    If you’re refer­ring to TUCKER MAX, Tucker Max is AWESOME AS HELL and someone I look up to and aspire to be more like. And you clearly did­n’t see the movie you’re besmirch­ing, since I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell was actu­ally quite good-natured, sweet and harmless.
    But why to go all out on that handle: “brad.” Lowercase. Says it all right there. Everyone knows I’m funny, and any­one who does­n’t is a Nurse Ratched-worthy school­marm. Again, I don’t have to repeat the LAUNDRY LIST of major crit­ics fall­ing all over them­selves to help me catch a break, but in the words of Phil Anselmo, I bow beneath NO FLAG, I do my own thing, and I want to be a PERFORMER, not a WRITER. Which makes it DOUBLY AWESOME that I DON’T EVEN WANT TO REALLY BE A WRITER, and I can still turn a phrase like no one’s biznass, and write circles around ANY of you sad­sacks with one hand tied behind my back. Yet all you guys have blogs and think you’re some­how “in the biz,” when in fact what you’re react­ing neg­at­ively to is the fact that I PUT A MIRROR UP TO YOUR FACE and make you real­ize you’re not get­ting any­where either, that I am what you fear, because I AM SPEAKING THE TRUTH, and I am WHAT YOU ARE. An out­sider look­ing in, blus­ter­ing to con­vince him­self of his nonex­ist­ent worth.
    At least I admit it, and it makes you uncom­fort­ably because you know your life sucks just as bad, and you’re prob­ably even fur­ther from your goals than I am, and if someone as BRILLIANT as me isn’t mak­ing it, what chance is there for you?

  • Frank McDevitt says:

    LexG: the Spencer Pratt of the film blog­ging world?

  • It’s amaz­ing. You more or less ignore me as a crit­ic­al entity, Mr. Kenny, which is entirely your right. But then, out of nowhere, you sud­denly raise your antenna like the Great Gazoo, glom onto one of my tweets – a tri­fling ejac­u­la­tion amidst reams of deeply ser­i­ous work that I am quite proud of – and pop it into one of your “young snotty snark­meisters vs. the appro­pri­ately behaved Professionals” rants. Like I am some 23 year old with a laptop and a learners’ permit.
    If you were to say, “this tweet is a cheap shot,” or whatever, that it’s dis­course unbe­com­ing or what have you, fine. Twitter breeds clipped, unsub­stan­ti­ated claptrap and while I gen­er­ally do my best with it, I did not in the example you cited. Truth be told, I have found Hale’s work lack­ing in sub­stance since his earli­er days as an NYT TV writer, pre­cisely because he favors snark over ana­lys­is. So, bad job me, I fell into the same trap, and let my own bit­ter­ness about two laid-off years get the best of me. Not my finest hour. I admit.
    But you know what? That’s prob­ably for someone with some con­text to tell me. Not you.

  • Raypride says:

    As always, astute com­ment­ary about Mr. White. I would like to sub­scribe to your newsletter.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @ Michael Sicinski: The nature of the above rumin­a­tion was pre­dom­in­antly per­son­al. It was­n’t inten­ded as any­thing like a sur­vey of crit­ic­al thought on the inter­net or any such thing. I am aware of your oth­er ser­i­ous work, enjoy quite a bit of it, and no, I don’t give it as much atten­tion as I prob­ably should, as it more often than not does rep­res­ent a stand­ard that more inter­net cri­ti­cism ought to aim for. On the oth­er hand, I did­n’t write “Can I have Mike Hale’s job? Because he sucks.” You did. Perhaps more import­antly, I did­n’t “retweet” it, either. Enlighten me: when’s the last time Karina Longworth retweeted some­thing of yours? Did it relate to your more ser­i­ous work? Maybe you ought to com­plain to her. Sometimes the people you think are doing you favors do you no favors at all. But you’re old enough to know that.

  • Well, first off, let me apo­lo­gize. If your blog had a delete-comment option, I cer­tainly would have deleted my rash, ill-advised response seconds after pulling the trig­ger. It was unne­ces­sary, a good example of why I gen­er­ally don’t com­ment on blogs, and really not dis­course of any use to anyone.
    You are cor­rect that I must take respons­ib­il­ity for even the most use­less, tossed-off non­sense I throw out there on the web. I am usu­ally more care­ful with Twitter, but there you go.
    Also, point taken re: the retweet. I did­n’t even know it had happened, but it does remind me of the regetttable fact that empty snark is the Gold Standard these days, some­thing we all for­get at our peril.
    In any case, I do thank you for your meas­ured response, and your kind words regard­ing my actu­al work. Very gen­tle­manly under the cir­cum­stances. I should not have flown of the handle, but to be hon­est, I think I felt that I was being held up simply as a mod­el of “more bad beha­vi­or” by a writer I greatly respect. But hey, in this instance, the shoe fit.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    No need to apo­lo­gize, Michael; your points are of interest and legit­im­ate and have spurred some fur­ther rumin­a­tions on my part, which see above (I think you’ll recog­nize the appro­pri­ate post by its title). Might be a good spot to fur­ther the conversation.

  • Tholymabe says:

    There’s a new ker­fuffle every day. Seems to me a way to get noticed. The web inven­ted it, then the older nerds struck back. But Glenn, the wack you take at Ray Pride is more dis­gust­ing than any­thing you said to Sasha Grey in TGE.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @Tholymabe: I con­fess you have the advant­age of me. Ray Pride’s pro­tean work aside, he and I got off on the wrong foot w/r/t per­son­al inter­net rela­tions; and our sub­sequent exchanges haven’t really motiv­ated me to put that foot right. I can only assume that he feels sim­il­arly. So I don’t under­stand pre­cisely why it is dis­gust­ing of me to refer to him, rather indir­ectly and entirely cir­cuit­ously, as “one mother­fuck­er I nev­er did like” (which is indeed what Miles Davis called Symphony Sid). Rude, cer­tainly, but dis­gust­ing? Beats me.

  • new balance says:

    If a man emp­ties his purse into his head, no man can take it away from him, an invest­ment in know­ledge alaways pays the best interest.Do you understand?

  • Jim Davis says:

    You been tel­lin’ me you’re a genius/Since you were seventeen/In all the time I’ve known you/I still don’t know what you mean.”
    An organ­ic spam­bot is what LexG is, at this point. The joke passed its expiry date a LONG time ago.