Oh NPR, your take on pop culture criticism is exactly my speed. This piece talks about how fans of the hoity-toity/"good" movies and music tend to look down on the more low-brow fare. As an unapologetic fan of summer blockbusters, the actiony shoot-em-ups that come barreling into the theatres and our lives once a year, I run into this problem all the time. My elitist friends who only venture into the cineplex for the latest Coen's piece or a Haneke retrospective don't understand my willingness to shell out $10 to see the explosions on a big screen and hear them in Dolby surround sound. My home TV doesn't look that good (although the new one is pretty close squeee!) and I think those are the movies that benefit from the big screen treatment.
I think this sort of divide in the movie-lover world boils down to a movies vs. films divide. People who are fans of "films" can oftentimes look down on mere "movies." Those who want to just be entertained by "movies" view the "film" aficionados as elitist snobs. It's the classic "us vs. them" battle playing out in the multi-plex.
Some movies try to bridge the gap. The first movie that pops into my head is Mr. and Mrs. Smith. It offered a clever and sharp take on the summer action movie. It was a pretty sharp satire on the dynamics within a marriage. Many dismissed it a just another piece of Hollywood schlock. Those people missed out.
The point I think everyone should take from the NPR piece? This line: "Something being Over There (this piece's phrase for referring to Low Culture) doesn't mean that there's nothing interesting to be said about it." This is the motto of this blog and as my readers I hope it is the motto of your movie-going experience.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Links I Like: Academizing "Low" Culture
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment