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Review
New York Times celebrates mindless Hollywood fare
By David Walsh
3 January 2007
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In a December 27 article in the New York Times, Pirates,
Penguins and Potboilers Rule the Box Office, reporter David
Halbfinger reiterates his principal theme a number of times: 2006
demonstrated that US film audiences have no interest in substantive
works.
A year after Hollywood rediscovered weighty political
and social issues in movies like Syriana, Crash
and Brokeback Mountain, he writes, the box
office story of 2006 was that moviegoers finally said, Enough.
Granted that Halbfinger is struggling for a journalistic hook
on which to peg his piece about Hollywoods commercial fortunes,
it is telling that he chose this one. One pictures American filmgoers,
exhausted from an endless stream of socially critical dramas,
bursting through theater exit doors and pumping their fists in
anger. Instead, in reality, 2005 offered a number of politically
more interesting, limited works, that attracted critical and popular
attention, after years and years of a terrible drought.
There was no comparable work in 2006. However, the autumn saw
the release of perhaps two dozen American films that could be
categorized as serious efforts. Their individual fates
depended on a host of factors, including artistic and intellectual
quality. And their release followed a number of international
film festivals clearly registering a global cinema radicalization.
Halbfingers approach is impressionistic and superficial,
to say the least.
He continues: The big money was to be made [in 2006]
making people laugh, cry and squeeze their dates armsnot
think. Halbfinger cites the comments of Rob Moore, marketing
and distribution chief at Paramount: What worked was classic,
get-away-from-it-all entertainment.... What didnt was things
that were more challenging and esoteric.
Among the challenging and esoteric films that didnt
succeed at the box office, according to the article, were Richard
Linklaters Fast Food Nation, Paul Greengrasss
United 93, Clint Eastwoods Flags of Our Fathers
and Edward Zwicks Blood Diamond.
On the other hand, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Mans
Chest did very well, along with Click, Talladega
Nights, Open Season, Casino Royale, Da Vinci
Code, X-Men: The Last Stand and The Pursuit of Happyness.
Alan Horn, president of Warners, based on the relative
commercial failure of Blood Diamond, draws the conclusion:
The audience is telling us that either they want lighter
fare, and they just dont want to go there and have a movie
as thematically heavy as Blood Diamond is, or its
the quality of the movie, Horn said.
Halbfinger continues: Audiences apparently werent
eager to read, either. With directors like Clint Eastwood, Alejandro
González Iñárritu and Mel Gibson pushing
for authenticity, the studios wound up releasing subtitled movies
that were shot largely or entirely in Japanese, Moroccan, Mexican,
Mayan and Russian. But even Brad Pitt couldnt draw big crowds
for Babel, and the Fox Searchlight release of the Russian
blockbuster Night Watch proved that some cultural exchanges
will remain a one-way street.
According to the articles logic, most filmgoers in the
US neither want to read, think nor concern themselves with much
of anything. In the first place, if that were the case, who would
be responsible for it? American films of a different era managed
to entertain and say something about the world. If Hollywood has
given up expressing anything important and thoroughly succeeded
in accustoming its audience to mindlessness, that would represent
a devastating indictment of the film studios, not the population.
In any case, the situation is not as Halbfinger presents it.
There are obvious ideological and political difficulties in the
US, but everything indicates a serious state of discontent and
anxiety in the populationpoll numbers; the recent elections;
an article published by the Times the same day as Halbfingers
suggests that in 2006 popular music songwriters were also
grappling with a war that wouldnt go away and that
Awareness of the war throbs like a chronic headache behind
more pleasant distractions.
Of course, audience members can attempt to flee the Iraq war
and increasing economic hardships by seeking out escapist
entertainment. Such things have been known to happen. In the first
place, however, why should laughing and crying
and squeezing a dates arm be counterposed to
thinking? Again, there was a time when popular film entertainers,
like Chaplin and Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock and John Ford,
could produce all those responses.
A chief difficulty with Halbfingers piece is that it
uncritically accepts the existing state of political and cultural
affairs in the US. The article is predicated on the notion that
somehow the average American filmgoer is an entirely
free agent, able to pick and choose what he or she likes, fully
informed about the possibilities and deliberately selecting light
entertainment over the dreadfully heavy alternative.
In fact, the American population lives virtually under siege,
bombarded 24 hours a day by a noisome, ignorant media. An honest
discussion about film quality and content in the US mass media
is precluded from the outset under conditions where the television
networks, radio stations and some newspapers are pieces of enormous
conglomerates that also own movie studios.
General Electric, for instance, owns NBC and Universal Pictures;
Time Warner owns CNN, HBO and Warner Bros. Pictures and New Line
Cinema; Walt Disney owns ABC, along with Touchstone, Miramax and
Walt Disney Pictures; Rupert Murdochs News Corporation owns
the Fox television network, 20th Century Fox, Fox Searchlight
Pictures and Blue Sky Studios and the New York Post and
TV Guide, among other print publications.
The film industry is a multibillion-dollar enterprise. Tens
of millions of dollars are spent promoting this or that blockbuster,
on whose box office figures the fate of a studio and its executives
may depend. Other, sometimes better films are released without
fanfare, ignored by the media and allowed to disappear. Still
others are never made at all. The choices offered most filmgoers
in the US are terribly limited. Under these conditions, the success
or failure of a given work may possess something of an arbitrary
or even accidental character.
Of course there are also problems with audiences. The debased
culture has had an impact. People put up with far too much, in
the cinema too. But an artist or a journalist, for that matter,
who was genuinely concerned about the situation would wage a struggle
for a higher level of popular consciousness, not simply register
a kind of malicious delight at the problems.
In September 2006 Halbfinger vented his spleen at the spate
of antiwar and politically radicalized films presented at the
Toronto film festival. He wrote in the Times, American
conservatives itching to go another round with Hollywood liberals
may want to redirect their ire to the north this time of year,
adding that the film festival has been all but overrun with
films attacking President Bush or the protracted war in Iraqin
subtle ways and like sledgehammers, with vitriol and with dispassionate
fly-on-the-wall observation.
Unease about critical films, and now pleasure over the success
of trivial ones ... this kind of journalism is one of the objective
problems the American population has to overcome.
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