And I didn't even have to do anything humiliating! The grande dame of gossip quotes from my review of "Thank You for Smoking:"
ARE MOVIES  more anti-cigarette these days?
On the contrary, Steve Sailer tells us in "The American Conservative,"  "Lighting up is presently considered the surest way to give characters that  edgy 'indie' attitude. A study in The Lancet found there was as much smoking in  movies in 2002 as in Humphrey Bogart's heyday. Despite all its high-minded talk,  Hollywood cares more about its coolness quotient than its social  conscience."
Google allows any movie  reviewer to do rapid factual research on the issues brought up in a movie, but  it's remarkable how few bother, even with a film like "Thank you for  Smoking," which is aimed directly at the kind of people who watch cable  news more than movies. Instead, they typically check off what they liked about  the film (of the "The fourth male lead, Tom Sizemore, was really good"  ilk) and disliked.
For a good description of what a critic should do, Ben  Yagoda's analysis of the failures of the NYT's Stakhanovite book reviewer  Michiko Kakutani is worth reading:
It should  be clear to anyone who has read Kakutani's reviews that she has an estimable  intelligence; she backs this up with what must be many real or virtual  all-nighters in which she digests every word ever published by the writer under  review. She takes books seriously, a valuable and ever-rarer trait. Furthermore,  in my observation, she is more or less right in her judgments most of the  time...
But the sour-grapes sniping from spurned authors should not obscure the fact  that Kakutani is a profoundly uninteresting critic. Her main weakness is her  evaluation fixation. This may seem an odd complaint—the job is called critic,  after all—but in fact, whether a work is good or bad is just one of the many  things to be said about it, and usually far from the most important or  compelling...  Kakutani doesn't offer the stylistic flair, the wit, or the  insight one gets from Kael and other first-rate critics; for her, the verdict is  the only thing. One has the sense of her deciding roughly at Page 2 whether or  not a book is worthy; reading the rest of it to gather evidence for her case;  spending some quality time with the Thesaurus; and then taking a large blunt  hammer and pounding the message home...
As a student at Oxford, the future drama critic Kenneth Tynan got back a paper  with this comment: "Keep a strict eye on eulogistic & dyslogistic  adjectives—They shd diagnose (not merely blame) & distinguish  (not merely praise.)" Tynan's tutor, who happened to be C.S. Lewis, was  offering a lesson Kakutani could have benefited from... (Another Lewis quote  with relevance to Kakutani: "If we are not careful criticism may become a  mere excuse for taking revenge on books whose smell we dislike by erecting our  temperamental antipathies into pseudo-moral judgments.")
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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