CorrespondenceCritics

A kind of poem

By December 27, 2011No Comments

I nor­mally don’t re-post anonym­ous e‑mails from folks who are dis­pleased with my review­ing style, but this piece, received this morn­ing (December 27, day after Boxing Day!), had an inter­est­ing, albeit per­haps inad­vert­ent, Cummings vibe to it, and…well, like Steve Inwood said to John Travolta in Stayin’ Alive, “an anger…and an intens­ity.” I admit I was mainly taken by the format­ting, which I repro­duce here as exactly as the TypePad tem­plate makes pos­sible. You think I should track this guy down and have him watch The Girlfriend Experience? Anyway, the “title” comes from the e‑mail’s sub­ject line. 

hmm some critic

Glenn Kenny
some damn crit­ic you turned out to be.
you slander­ing good movies down left and right like if you was god.
which by all means your not god and nev­er will be,.. those movies you put down and said was bad movies was pretty good to the gen­er­al pub­lic and they made more money then you can come close to even dream of making.
and you also seem to slander stars too, what an idi­ot you turned out to be.
No won­der you got fired for being a critic !
neg­at­ive cri­ti­cism to every good movie out there will get you fired and if you slander a star or a person !
where was your head any way ?.…up your ass hole where the sun don’t shine ?
I buy those movies and love them and col­lect them.
like star wars and twi­light and few oth­er sagas.
I bet you didn’t have your meds the day you critic’s about those new movie’s and prob­ably haven’t got­ten laid in long time.
or maybe you was drunk or high off your ass when you did it.
I don’t know and I really don’t care.
I am glad you got fired !!.… and dude if you ever get hired by some one else I bet you have loads of hat­ters spam­ming your crap and throw­ing away your cri­ti­cism if it’s on a new paper.
or bet­ter yet using it to wipe their ass off with.
poor boy critic’s like you just cause hate and make people dis­like you.
there’s more fans to those movies you slander then you have for fans.
you ever think about that ?,..hmm” do you every con­sider it that those stars and movies has more beloved fans and fam­ily then your sorry ass does ?
why you think those stars and movies make more money in 1 day out at the theatres and the stars make more money doing 1 day film shoot then you do in 1 year !!
have some com­mon sense and brains, cause by the looks of your writ­ings of cri­ti­cism is a joke and you show poor judgment !
this the first email I ever sent to a stu­pid idi­ot crit­ic in my life.
I nor­mally don’t both­er to read or read all the way through crit­ics posts or writ­ings, I usu­ally by pass them and throw them out or block them online.
cause I think most of you types are mor­ons and jeal­ous freaks cause they can’t get a spot to do their own act­ing work or start a good act­ing career !
so they whine and cry and slander oth­er stars work and slander movies,… that is pretty damn low.
their just out there per­form­ing and doing the best they can to do what makes them happy and to make oth­ers happy.
cause they got the balls to actu­ally do it and try for it,.. plus they have the talent !
it takes allot to get on a stage and be on film to act and won­der if your good or doing a good job.
and in many cases they are doing a good job if they keep get­ting hired !!
people like you just go around slander­ing them in magazines and news papers and stuff, giv­ing them a bad out look.
when they should be hear­ing hey you did a good job doing that film or hey that was some great per­form­ance you did doing the scene.
I really hope your career has ended for good.
cause like you said about those stars and those movies “ YOU SUCK “ !!!
so have a nice day and don’t drink and drive,..loser !

No Comments

  • Simon Abrams says:

    I feel like drink­ing and driv­ing all of a sudden…

  • ratzkywatzky says:

    It makes me unbe­liev­ably happy to think of hat­ters spamming.

  • Nathan Duke says:

    Hopefully, those aren’t mad hat­ters spam­ming you. It could be a scourge of psy­che­del­ic pop-ups.

  • Tom Russell says:

    Or, a scourge of shoulder-of-pig-and-ham.

  • bill says:

    but–though all kinds of officers
    (a yearn­ing nation’s blueeyed pride)
    their pass­ive prey did kick and curse
    until for wear their clarion
    voices and boots were much the worse,
    and egged the first­classprivates on
    his rectum wickedly to tease
    by means of skil­fully applied
    bay­on­ets roas­ted hot with heat–
    Olaf(upon what were once knees)
    does almost cease­lessly repeat
    “there is some shit I will not eat”
    besides twi­light is a great saga
    all you do is slander stars
    real ori­gin­al i hope you nev­er get hired again

  • Harry K. says:

    Bless you, Sir Bill, bless you.

  • I was expect­ing it to close with
    “Sincerely,
    Armond White”

  • AdenDreamsOf says:

    Judging by the non­stop gram­mat­ic­al errors and lack of clar­ity, I’m going to guess this per­son is either very uneducated or men­tally ill so I would not feel offen­ded if I were you, Mr. Kenny.

  • Oliver_C says:

    Twilight isn’t a
    saga: it’s long but so’s the
    phone book; spam­mers FOAD

  • lazarus says:

    Glenn is the 1%
    OCCUPY SOME CAME RUNNING

  • lipranzer says:

    I don’t have the tal­ent to respond poet­ic­ally like Bill and oth­ers did, so my response would merely be, “Dear Sir or Madam, I thought you should know some mor­on has hacked into your e‑mail account and is send­ing idi­ot­ic and badly spelled messages.”

  • ZS says:

    Darn. I was going to send you an anonym­ous poem about how much I dis­liked Young Adult.

  • Brian says:

    I’m com­bin­ing this post and the one above it in my head, and sud­denly hear­ing this per­son’s screed sung by Joe Strummer…Also, what’s with the com­ment that you appar­ently hate “Star Wars”? Didn’t you edit a whole book about “Star Wars” a few years back? Not that I really expect clar­ity or logic from this person…

  • Jeff says:

    The poster may have made numer­ous spelling and gram­mat­ic­al errors, but he has a point. In my view, the best movies that I’ve seen this year were Thor, Captain America, Source Code and War Horse. I met Kenneth Branaugh and Chris Hemsworth at a screen­ing of Thor and to my sur­prise, loved it. The act­ing, script, action, chem­istry and spe­cial effects all worked incred­ibly well. I loved the atten­tion to detail, includ­ing the SOUND of the heavy snow giants walk­ing up to Thor from his rear, as well as the group run­ning to grab the cas­ket. The Destroyer was a very cool update of Gort from the ori­gin­al ver­sion of the Day The Earth Stood Still and it’s a great love story, with excel­lent nar­rat­ive, in addi­tion to tons of well shot action. A great and enjoy­able movie, that by the way, has racked up almost $500 mil­lion, before sales from Blu Ray are added.
    I’d say that rep­res­ents a LOT of people that voted with their dol­lars to see this movie. This and Captain America are the most fun of any movies since Avatar and Star Trek and I’m look­ing for­ward to see­ing The Avengers this May (along with This Means War, star­ring Trek’s Chris Pine and Tom Hardy, which opens in Feb. and looks to be the best com­edy in years).

  • Michael Dempsey says:

    The lines that promp­ted this post aren’t any kind of poetry. They’re the brain-dead rav­ings of all-too-common-these-days stu­pid­ity, and they don’t deserve to be cut any kind of slack – no mat­ter how “amus­ing” or “iron­ic” – at all.

  • Frank McDevitt says:

    Glenn, any idea what review might have inspired this bit of, er, “poetry”? Because for the most part you haven’t writ­ten any out­right pans along the lines of “I Am Number Four” or “The Zookeeper” lately.

  • ZS says:

    Jeff, I’m amused you found a point in the poem. I do have a ques­tion though. When you write, “A great and enjoy­able movie, that by the way, has racked up almost $500 mil­lion, before sales from Blu Ray are added.
    I’d say that rep­res­ents a LOT of people that voted with their dol­lars to see this movie.”
    Do you know if every­one who saw the movie liked it or thought it great? If not, how is its box-office intake a cri­terion of value?

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @ Frank: MSN Movies put both the “Worst” and “Best” movies of 2011 lists on its front page today, hence the slight onslaught of dis­ap­prob­a­tion. My “Thor” issues seem to be a par­tic­u­lar stick­ing point for many.

  • Asher says:

    This is kind of the inverse of what I think of you as a crit­ic. You like way too much. You can (almost) always be coun­ted on to praise any­thing that’s remotely crit­ic­ally acclaimed, no mat­ter how hor­rible it actu­ally is. That’s why, in spite of their many blind spots, I stick to the folks from Slant.

  • If it is the duty of a poet to rep­res­ent the apo­theosis of the era, then this anonym­ous mas­ter has executed his duty with a rare mas­tery of the form. I salute you, unknown geni­us! That first line alone has the mus­cu­lar scan­sion that marks a born wordsmith.

  • Jane says:

    This should be your next year’s Christmas card. Or, at the very least, have it embroidered on a pil­low for pos­ter­ity. It’s lovely. And, clas­sic. Godspeed.

  • Chris Stangl says:

    really though thank you for shar­ing this
    this let­ter was pretty good to me and the gen­er­al pub­lic!!…, i would buy it and col­lect it
    even though the movie star’s have more beloved family!! …,
    ps do you know how to throw out and block online oth­er critic’s??
    there are some crit­ic’s i want to block but
    i am prob­ably too drunk and really high to do it!!…,hmm?

  • Josh says:

    This was clearly writ­ten by Taylor Lautner in response to your Breaking Dawn Part 1 review. “Glennnnnn!!! You’re tear­ing me apart!!!”

  • jbryant says:

    Nothing bet­ter than the old “it made money, so it must be great” argu­ment. My dad first used this on me when I was maybe elev­en and rolling my eyes at some song Porter Wagoner was singing on TV. Dad said, “He’s mak­ing more money than YOU are.” And I said, “I hope so. I’m eleven.”
    As for “vot­ing with their dol­lars,” Jeff – I don’t know about you, but when I buy a tick­et to a movie, it usu­ally just means I want to see the movie. Unless it’s a repeat view­ing, I can­’t pos­sibly know if it’s “great” or not. I sup­pose Cinemascore gives us a gen­er­al idea of what open­ing week­end audi­ences think of a film’s qual­ity. But, as ZS sug­gests, unless you know what per­cent­age of tick­et sales rep­res­ents repeat view­ers, you can­’t make any real cor­rel­a­tion between box office and audi­ence satisfaction.

  • paul says:

    As my first ex-wife was wont to remark “Ain’t no cure for stupid”.

  • Mr. Ziffel says:

    Imagine going through the trouble of “block­ing” online crit­ics. Wouldn’t that make it damn near impossible to log on to the intertubes?

  • AeC says:

    It’s even bet­ter if you ima­gine it being read by John Lithgow (cf. http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/387033/may-19–2011/john-lithgow-performs-gingrich-press-release – skip to about 3:20)

  • Elizabeth says:

    Dear Glenn, I’m so mad at you for not lik­ing the movies I like! You suck. And, you’re mean. And stu­pid. And drunk.

  • D Cairns says:

    WONDERFUL. I feel like I’ve died and gone to heav­en with brain damage.

  • jbryant says:

    There once was a crit­ic named Kenny
    Who liked none of my favor­ites – not any!
    His num­ber one pick
    Was some Cronenberg flick
    But unlike THOR it won’t make a penny

  • I.B. says:

    More than some sort of demen­ted poetry, it reminded me of por­tions of ‘Infinite Jest’ writ­ten in the first per­son of some barely artic­u­lated char­ac­ters (I don’t remem­ber right now, it’s been four or five years since).
    Anyway, the money angle always proves to be amus­ing, because, even accept­ing the notions of “film cri­ti­cism as worth­less opin­ions that inex­plic­ably get paid for”, “art belongs to museums, movies are enter­tain­ment”, “film crit­ic as jeal­ous under­achiev­er”, and “movie star as humble folk that can­’t do no wrong”, they leave the writer of the mail in a very ugly spot. Consider, always accord­ing to his world­view (and feel free to sub­sti­tute sexes wherever you feel like it):
    ‑STAR: he is beau­ti­ful and sup­posedly has tal­ent. He may have to repeat a take sev­en times, sub­mit to make-up and that stuff, but he has mil­lions and mil­lions of dol­lars and vil­las and sport cars and dates super­mod­els, people every­where love him and THROW bags of money at him and his products no mat­ter what he does (as long as he does­n’t approve of Karl Marx or pokes fun at The Jesus), and they don’t even feel jeal­ous, they look up at him as mas­ter and one of their own at the same time. Only draw­back: it’s still illeg­al to hire hit­men to shut up those good-for-nothing film critics.
    ‑FILM CRITIC: he’s full of bit­ter­ness because he lacks the talent/guts/God’s approv­al to make it as a star and because nobody else likes the Polack films he adores, BUT, he gets to watch dozens of movies in the cinema and gets DVD cop­ies for FREE, he can write witty pieces insult­ing the work of those god­damned super­i­or lucky stars and get FUCKING PAID for it, and thou­sands of people read his words and know his name wheth­er they agree with him or hate his guts. The amount of money and fame he receives may be ridicu­lous com­pared to that of the star, but he cer­tainly gets his share doing pre­cious little.
    ‑ANONYMOUS DUDE: he’s stuck in a full-time, soul-killing, poorly-paid job, and if he wants to watch the latest Adam Sandler thing or buy the Special DVD Edition of Zookeeper he has to part with his sweat-soaked dol­lars. He can only share his opin­ions with his soon-to-be ex-girlfriend, his three or four drink­ing bud­dies, his tired cowork­ers, and at most a hun­dred people on Facebook who have him tagged as a friend but only shaked hands with him on a party a couple of years ago and no way they’re inter­ested in his bor­ing rant­ings. He’s so full of bit­ter­ness and envy he can­’t even man­age to hate Adam Sandler for his suc­cess, he has to settle on a mere film crit­ic who dares to pro­pose that he’s wast­ing his earn­ings on crap, so he devotes his pre­cious free time to writ­ing vicious hate mail that at best will be read only by the film crit­ic and shrugged off, and at worst will be pub­licly dis­played on the web for read­ers to make fun at him and won­der how someone so deluded still has the gall to lec­ture others.
    I mean… poor guy, you all should pity him. He can­’t even enjoy ‘Deep end’, for fuck­’s sake.

  • James Keepnews says:

    Glenn, please…PLEASE prom­ise us you’ll ask MSN to post a video of you doing a dra­mat­ic read­ing of this extraordin­ary example of pro­ject­ive verse.
    Or Shatner. You or Shatner.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    I can make no prom­ises, James. I’m try­ing to make an album w/ my band, and on top of that I’ve got Simon Abrams’ birth­day request for some kind of Iron Butterfly cov­er ver­sion, so I’m up to my ears in record­ing oblig­a­tions already. Like Regis Philbin said, “I’m only one man!”

  • James Keepnews says:

    Right on (and cool on you for being so obliged). Shatner, then.

  • I think Tom Waits could do it justice. Imagine the instru­ment­a­tion – cal­li­ope, anvil, glock­en­spiel, brake drum, etc. I’d buy that for a dollar.

  • Dree says:

    @I.B., clev­er. Me likey. PS ~ I wish I could go see NEW YEAR’S EVE with the “poet” ON New Year’s Eve. But, alas, merely a dream…

  • jim emerson says:

    Well, I could­n’t get bey­ond the first couple lines. But, jeez, did you say some­thing non-positive about “The Dark Knight” or something?