Boy, did I ever love this
Michael Antman piece on the terrible new DeNiro/Pacino flick
Righteous
Kill (the true twist ending now would be no
twist—ask David
Mamet), the unadulterated joy of experiencing the 1964
schlock-fest The Flesh Eaters
as a boy and the relative joylessness of modern cinema:
When I was
in college, I worked nights as a typesetter for a publisher that
distributed television programming guides, and part of my job was
to type in the descriptions of old movies. In the off hours,
usually around three or four in the morning, I would count the
movies I had already seen, and even then my list was more than a
thousand movies long. I can only imagine how long it would be
today, if I had the time to count.
But lately,
I’m starting to fall behind in my movie-going. The predominance of
CGI, the utter falsity of emotion on display in most Hollywood
product, and the joyless, stultifying sameness of scripts (thanks
to those screenplay consultants that tell you every movie “has” to
have three acts, and must have a precipitating event on page 17)
have taken most of the pleasure out of the movies, as have the
soulless multiplexes where they’re shown. If I were a
nine-year-old kid today, I wouldn’t even bother flicking Ju Jubees
at the necks of the automatons in front of me, watching Matthew
McConaughey and Kate Hudson play-acting their way through whatever
detestable nonsense they’re getting paid millions for; I doubt
they’d feel a thing.
I personally think there is plenty of great
filmmaking going on today if you seek it out. (It might be a matter
of taste. I did pen an
appreciation
of “torture porn,” after all.) Still, Lord, in a general sense,
all I can say when I see someone attacking CGI—no, I haven’t seen
The Dark Night or
Iron Man, I prefer
other
Christian Bale vehicles and Sabbath
Bloody Sabbath—and formulaic soullessness is
Amen!