'The type of movies that become classics'

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Because it's got heavyweight actors and a tragedic story-arc (slightly botched in this case). American Beauty, as well.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 9 January 2003 16:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

i've never seen heat and will happily till it comes on tv thanks, but the bfi book on it is really good

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 9 January 2003 16:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

the adam and joe version of american beauty is better obv

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 9 January 2003 16:56 (twenty-one years ago) link

Aye, they both fit. Se7en too, maybe? And is Fight Club an attampt to do the same from a po-mo PoV?

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Thursday, 9 January 2003 16:56 (twenty-one years ago) link

'Heat' been and gone, mark.

I kind of like (and "get") the use of the word meta in the above context. I never really understood the way it is used on ILX actually.

Jeff W, Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

As I understand it metasomething = something about that something i.e. metafiction is fiction about fiction, or about the act of writing. A meta-thread is a thread about who's posted the most threads, for instance. It gained currency on Usenet where it was good etiquette to put a [META] tag when you were discussing the newsgroup itself not its ostensible subject.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:03 (twenty-one years ago) link

Actually I don't know now if anyone called Heat an instant classic when it came out - i think it was just another thriller, hyped more than usual because it starred these two big guns of American cinema. American Beauty on the other hand was being called "classic" practically before it was even finished. It was supposed to you know, get to the heart of something. Tell us something important about the way we live etc etc. I don't know if we're closer to a list of ingredients though.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:12 (twenty-one years ago) link

i. Extremely big actor tackling a "small" story ?

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:13 (twenty-one years ago) link

Big, pretentious, quite good but not as good as it reckons it is (also sub 'important' for 'good' there), 'epic' (prob. self-consciously). Etcetera. It's dead hard defining summat like this even though we pretty much all know it when we see it.

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:15 (twenty-one years ago) link

i hate "instant classic". it's a terrible way to review a film, but it looks great on a poster. it means nothing. the hyperbole of film reviewers and publicity is exactly what makes it hard to see the films you would like. answer: only watch old movies. grr

Alan (Alan), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:16 (twenty-one years ago) link

I only watch movies with werewolves in these days.

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:18 (twenty-one years ago) link

Tom given your definition then Nick was probably right to use the word meta for what he was on about: "something designed/conceived with the intent of it being an instant classic". Conceived to be an instant classic = about the form, or am I being daft?

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:19 (twenty-one years ago) link

i.e. at least part of the content of the 'conceived to be a classic' is the form it takes

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

I think American Beauty is a good example of this kind of thing. Perhaps Road To Perdition is an even better example. American Beauty is a film which is most like literary fiction I can think of. Cinematographic set pieces, acting fireworks, pretensions for big issues - not much going on under the hood.

I always think Oscar winners though are pretty much resigned to the "not being classics" dumper. (Ha ha Marty).

This brings up the problem with the idea of "perfect art" anyway. If its all there, if it leaves the spectator little to do, if it is too well done then what is there left to pick over. The art is in the thoughts and the discussions afterwards.

Pete (Pete), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:21 (twenty-one years ago) link

That's true sometimes, Pete.

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

Have we ever discussed art v entertainment here?

Alan (Alan), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

Yeah Tim I see what you're getting at and I assume that's what Simon and Nick were getting at too - and I think it applies in a sense but it's not really directly about the form as attempting to epitomise the form, or even 'complete' it at least for the current audience - the comment on the form is implicitly there in such attempts of course but secondary usually to other content. The Corrections IIRC (not read it) is 'meta' in both senses.

(The commentary is often negative too, detectable in what gets left out - writers trying for the Great American Novel don't generally put spaceships and aliens in; attempts on the Great [whatever] Album tend to eschew drum machines, and so on)

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

The commentary is much more interesting when you note the negative. Because then you really do have a meta-commentary about what musicians thinks proper musicians should do.

Pete (Pete), Thursday, 9 January 2003 17:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

I love most of Scorsese's films, but I've a feeling I will dislike GoNY in exactly the same way that I dislike David Lean films and a number of recent middlebrow-literary historical novels.

Things are worse in books, I think, in regard to prejudices against certain types of work - it is far harder for an SF novel to get accepted into the higher reaches of literary greatness than for an SF film. Maybe newer, younger media are inevitably more in tune with newer modes of thought regarding genre? Whatever, there is still a widespread assumption (probably not here, but for most people) that anything published with the look of literary fiction is automatically of higher artistic value than anything with a spaceship or smoking gun on the cover. Comedy is particularly slighted in this kind of thinking. You don't have to read a lot of these various streams to spot that this is misguided.

Incidentally, I do think we're in a bit of a mess in regard to the canon for recent cinema. Not just because of the S&S poll being so backward-looking, though that highlighted the problem (and I know they're doing a last-25-years follow-up poll). We seem to be awaiting some sort of coalescing into a new canon, maybe some kind of new paradigm. I'm hoping for some real sparks.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Thursday, 9 January 2003 20:21 (twenty-one years ago) link

maybe canons are over

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 9 January 2003 22:06 (twenty-one years ago) link

for example i just got told off by my sister and her b/f for queen of the damned not actually being the greatest film ever made

i told them a. they hadn't seen it in the cinema and b. give me the dvd then, so it needn't poollute yr front room any more

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 9 January 2003 22:08 (twenty-one years ago) link

I don't think people are willing to abandon the canon yet, Mark. It's partly the very good objections to the whole idea which give the debate an extra edge - one has to justify not just film A's inclusion in the canon, but the idea of the canon. Maybe that's why it's hard to get anything new in there.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Thursday, 9 January 2003 22:21 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'd like to see the end of canon's, but I don't think we ever will, merely a succession of new generations ascending their own choices to the status of 'canonical' according to their own criteria, which would not so much negate previous canons as take steps towards codifying them and make them historical documents of a kind. ie; the baby boomers are determining the canon right now, but soon the post-boomers will be, and then ME!

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Thursday, 9 January 2003 23:09 (twenty-one years ago) link

Well, I'm not sure I go along with that view of how canons work. They are more mutable than that, and (following the PoMo party line) surely there are an almost endless number of different ones anyway. Still, it is true that certain perspectives are predominant, and they are the ones the newspapers (which don't want a complex, fluctuating view on things) print, as if fact, so I guess you are kind of right.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Thursday, 9 January 2003 23:12 (twenty-one years ago) link

Well, the canon is the thing that common consensus decrees is the canon via recieved wisdom, isn't it? And as incredulity to meta-narratives / credible authorities increases, the canon becomes more and more the peoples' thing, and less the thing of peope who actually sit around at 11.30pm discussing what the canon is, so therefore I'm right, sadly, and The Daily Mail decides it right now.

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Thursday, 9 January 2003 23:41 (twenty-one years ago) link

On day -meta will be attached to all projects and Tom will explode. It's political correctness gone metamad!

N. (nickdastoor), Friday, 10 January 2003 00:36 (twenty-one years ago) link

I think 'instant classic' may have been attached to Heat. I'm pretty sure it was attached to Out of Sight. Films that are well crafted and are new twists on tried, tested and well respected old genres tend to get it most.

N. (nickdastoor), Friday, 10 January 2003 00:41 (twenty-one years ago) link

Responding only to the GoNY pre-publicity (it opens tomorrow) is yes, completely. Whether that makes it a complete Meta-Movie I'm not so sure because its obviously not completely commenting on cinema itself. In all its promotion though it does appear to have been made with one eye on the Oscar and one eye on posterity.

This maybe isn't the point of the thread, but are the Oscars in any way connected to the idea of 'classics' or posterity? I mean, in the last 15-20 years.

I don't really follow the competition, but it seems to me that they're essentially US cinema awards which miss what US cinema does best. That is, either terrific innovative action stuff (Die Hard series, the Matrix), or, like a lot of other countries, terrific indie-ish stuff (Harmony Korine etc).

Instead the most important awards go to the in-between junk like American Beauty and Erin Brockovich.

I'm assuming here. If big awards didn't go to the likes of AB and EB, I take this shit back.

But still, do the Oscars count? It's like, is the best film ever 'Citizen Kane' or is it 'Star Wars'? Obviously, it's neither. But they're both films that have to be dealt with, and neither would win an Oscar (CK would if it was remade, I admit, but I'd say it wouldn't if it were released NOW as it is).

Eyeball Kicks (Eyeball Kicks), Friday, 10 January 2003 01:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

yeah american beauty is the film i thought of when i saw the thread title...
i am interested in people's thoughts on this postmodernfirstlastgreat americanmetaalbum situation,i understand completely people's objections to the corrections/new roots album/gangs of new york,and in a way i share their cynicism,but am not entirely sure why...
should people not be ambititious?
is it that the kind of people who try to record a "classic,epoch defining album" (or whatever,the great american novel,the first great film of the twenty first century,whatever)just aren't the sort of poeople who will make anything amazing?
is it that that sort of ambition goes hand in hand with arrogance that would prevent something truly great from being possible?
could someone write a novel that you would consider worthy of the title "great american novel" if they weren't trying?
(obviously all the expressions used above,epoch defining album,etc,are absolutely hideous,and instantly make you prejudiced against them,but is it because they are described as such?)
not my most coherent point,but hopefully you see what i mean...
should no one ever aspire to great,era defining works of art?
is just that now any attempt to do so makes us cynical,makes us think its a marketing ploy?

robin (robin), Friday, 10 January 2003 05:18 (twenty-one years ago) link

i mean,is it just that it's no longer possible to make a work of art on such a grand scale?
if so,why?
i presume everyone likes some past books/films/albums whatever that were intended to be "important",or whatever,whether it be sgt peppers,ulysses,apocalypse now,or whatever
is it just that the very way these things are routinely described makes us cynical?
if so,should we not worry about judging a book by the marketing techniques used on its cover?

robin (robin), Friday, 10 January 2003 05:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

Hey -- good point Robin. Some novels and films and albums which are "classics" WERE designed that way -- not CK, not Gatsby for example, but certainly Ulysses and certainly Waiting For Godot and certainly Sgt. Peppers and certainly uh, Goodfellas & even Easy Rider as I remember but def. Metropolis.

The difference I think being that they were heralded as classics because they so set out and succeeded at doing something NEW which the directors/authors knew they were intending as they set out along this.

Now perhaps the problem is attempts to do old things with more polish?

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Friday, 10 January 2003 07:47 (twenty-one years ago) link

This is an interesting point. I personally don't like the type of thing listed, from Sgt Pep to Apoc Now, Godot plus Goodfellas. Ulysses I haven't read but is on my shelf somewhere but from what I know about it would fit in. I don't know what it is that makes me dislike them - maybe the sense that, in reaching for the great and the universal, they somehow miss the personal/human aspect which really does make things (I shudder to use the word) great (IMO). Hemingway, Tom Wolfe, etcetera, Scorcese - there's a weight of expectation and gravitas about their work and people's reactions to it, such as "ooh, Scorcese's new movie is about being an ambulance driver and how seeing the horror the horror of NYC through an ambulance driver's eyesdehumanises you, it MUST be GRATE", or "Hemingway's new book is about the Spanish Civil War, it MUST be the definitive statement ever on this topic", and that sense of giving these artifacts enormous cultural weight without really engaging with them first pisses me off and makes me wanna stand up and shout 'Emperor's New Clothes', which, i guess, comes from the fact that everyone hyped Taxi Driver to me as the best thign ever and when I finally saw it, it bored me to tears (does this say something about preconceptions? Disappointments? Can we escape the hype machiens and approach things open-minded and is this a good thing? ARGH! PTA set out to make an important movie with Magnolia, but I did not know this when I saw it first and was blown away - had I been ex[posed to the hype would I have hated it, or is it just either a; more my type of thing or b; simply better than, say, scorcese?! ARGH! Obj. vs subj. AGAIN! oh no! FITE! oh NO!)

Right, just discussed this with my workmate, and the best illustration we could think of was the film Amadeus (not the film itself so much as the story within). On one hand, Salieri, striving, trying his hardest to make great music, to be gifted by God with great msuic that is important and will send his name down in history. On the other hand, Mozart, this sniffing little swearing shagging madman who has no eye on history and no desire to be gifted by God but who is making the music Salieri so wants to make. Aye?

ie; The Idea that Scorcese, Frantzen, Flips et al have one eye on history and posterity when they're making their 'art', which makes it too self-conscious (or summat) to actually be the kind of thing they want to make.

Hunter Thompson got sent to LV to write about the bike race or whatever, he went a bit spazzo on drugs, wrote some craziness, and by accident almost to be the kind of Great American Novel, BECAUSE it wasn't made by someone who is trying to become a professional history maker, people just picked up on it and THAT amde it history.

Does this make sense?

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 10:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

I think part of the fault is also in the cynicism of the audience who have been told that we always want something new. So when we get a crafted attempt at a classic, which is using all the tricks in the already established book the criticism which can be wielded is - well its good but its just more of the same. I think I am actually decrying the cult of the new here, because when something is radically new people tend to attack that for not be easily comprehensible. Pshaw!

The Oscars is all about highlighting an idea of an American art film. Because by its very nature it is always trying to award stuff that under the previous Hollywood situation (two three years back) would be considered ground breaking or great it is nearly always out of step. Also it can be used to valorise a picture which has not done all that well commercially, Hollywood has as its number one award the takings after all.

COmpletely agree with what MArtin said above, especially about comedy. And what you say Nick makes complete sense to me, the idea of suceeding when you are not trying is possibly the most frustrating aspect of this. Which begs the question can you actually suceed if you are trying (to which the answer is probably yes, but lord knows how).

What I liked about Magnolia by the way is that it has all the trappings of an important movie with a message, which it contradicts and in the end is a bit of a laugh about it raining frogs. (Content undermines form).

Pete (Pete), Friday, 10 January 2003 10:46 (twenty-one years ago) link

(ps bcz it is supa-buggin me: SCORSESE not scorcese)

dialectiXoR of innocence vs experience: lyra can read the althiometer thought grace not learning => grows up and has sexy thhoughts abt will = can no longer read the althiometer => but now has the option of spending her life re-learning how to read it, via scholarship not grace => outcome = she will one day be able to read it better

the young prefer the art of pure intuition, bcz it allows them in also
the old begin to favour the art of intention and planning, bcz half their young buddies are now dead, of lousy intuition

mark s (mark s), Friday, 10 January 2003 10:49 (twenty-one years ago) link

Also, when writing reviews these days, I'm trying cosnciously to not use wordfs liek 'great' and 'classic' and things, but rather 'wonderful' or suchlike.

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 10:56 (twenty-one years ago) link

B-b-but (and this is part of the problem) classic already has a meaning within film history, the period of Classical Hollywood (1929 - 1950's). So this confounds the problem even more.

Problem with innocence versus experience dialectic is no-one starts innocent? Yes?

Pete (Pete), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

that's the essence of a dialectic, pete, not a problem

mark s (mark s), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

Aye, definitely. Damn the English language! More words than any other language (I know cos Trivial Pursuit told me last night) and we STILL use the same word to mean many different bloody things!

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:20 (twenty-one years ago) link

Aye, and no one has ALL the experience.

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:21 (twenty-one years ago) link

Oh yeah. Silly me.

Mind you the final point - the will allow her to read it better part, while I generally agree with it, disagreement with it is the basis of many anti-intellectual arguments.

Pete (Pete), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

What's an althiometer?

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:25 (twenty-one years ago) link

Phillip Pullman to thread.

Pete (Pete), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:28 (twenty-one years ago) link

Ah right, is this about them books I bought and then lent to the girlfriend so she could read them and tell me what happened cos she's much better at linear stories than what I am whereas I can only read (when I read at all) things with doomy titles like Escape From Freedom and even then only dead slow?

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

escape from freedom sounds a cracker!! talk abt lousy intuition!!

mark s (mark s), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:37 (twenty-one years ago) link

http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0805031499/qid=1042199061/sr=2-1/ref=sr_2_3_1/026-4949709-3474859

Escape from freedom! (I think ILx could write a better version).

Pete (Pete), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

Aye, that's the bitch. A Swedish diplomat / media commentator recommended it to me. First 30 pages = interesting.

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 11:53 (twenty-one years ago) link

Escape from Freedom is undoubtedly a chapter title of a Terrence Dicks novelisation of a Dr Who story

Alan (Alan), Friday, 10 January 2003 12:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

Chapter 10 The Trap

Chapter 11 The Doctor's Plan

Chapter 12 Escape From Freedom

Tom (Groke), Friday, 10 January 2003 12:12 (twenty-one years ago) link

Stop with the Dr Who stuff, you sound like my brother!

Nick Southall (Nick Southall), Friday, 10 January 2003 12:13 (twenty-one years ago) link

i think what i'm getting at is that,if we accept the idea that there have been some "great/epochal/original/turning point" books/albums/whatever,at some stage (whether or not we agree with the terms used to describe them),whether they be the odyssey,hamlet,beethoven's ninth,citizen kane,guernica,or whatever*,then surely there still can be


as in,surely it can't be that *right now*,its finally happened,we've reached the point in history when all great art has been made,and from now on people should just abandon the idea of trying to make an ambitious album/film/etc,and instead of trying to write the great british novel,the next dickens should scale it down a bit and aim for the mildly entertaining stoke-on-trent short story?
i mean,i'm sure there were people after shakespeare,mozart,homer,writing saying right,that's it,this art form has achieved all it can,all this new fangled bollocks is just a fad,etc (in fact,i vaguely remember reading an essay from elizabethan times suggesting that drama was dead as an art form,and had been since sophocles)

robin (robin), Friday, 10 January 2003 13:52 (twenty-one years ago) link

Well, if it's imitatedness yer after, then lots of classics don't make the cut. But here are some classics-in-that-sense

'Westworld'
'On the Town'
'Pepe Le Moko'
'Fast Times at Ridgemont High'

Enrique (Enrique), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:07 (twenty years ago) link

Hokum as in "a device used (as by showmen) to evoke a desired audience response", or as in "pretentious nonsense"? The first isn't a criticism, and the second is only serious if you expect "The Invisibles - the movie". It does what it does extremely well and looks great throughout.

Also I suspect some of this discussion is the shadow of the "genre fiction" discussion.

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:08 (twenty years ago) link

Okay. I meant in the second sense. But I'll let it drop, but for this: it doesn't have the internal consistency of 'Bladerunner', but I prefer it anyway because it's a lot more fun to watch.

Enrique (Enrique), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:10 (twenty years ago) link

Do you reckon there's going to be a lot of CoG knock-offs? I can only really think of two Matrix clones (Equilibrium and Underworld), though it would be foolish to think that it wasn't influential.

A documentary on The Usual Suspects pointed out that the actual film came in a distant second to its poster in terms of influence.

I picked Together because it is the other end of the spectrum - lots of critical love, not really much popular mindshare. Though look what happened to the moderately similar You Can Count on Me: film becomes underground sensation, stars get put in shit films, director gets bugger all.

(Tangenting all over the place - I'd consider YCCOM, Together and Take Care Of My Cat to be similar but they aren't really. In a perfect world they'd be obviously miles apart with tons of ickle films filling up the spaces between (and beyond))

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:17 (twenty years ago) link

the matrix is like the structuring absence in my moviegoing, i never ever want to see it.

amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:18 (twenty years ago) link

Why do you not want to see it?

City Of God has already casued a lot more money to flood into the Brazillian Film industry. (Not a knock off, but a film marketed ina very similar way to appeal to the CoG audience would be Man Of The Year).

Matrix was much more influential than just those two films (though they are obvious low budget knock-offs), there was ceratinly a knock on to the Blade movies, definitely the way the X-Men films developed, the whole attitude in action films towards CGI and wire-fu fights.

That perfect world exists Andrew but a lot of the films inbetween don't get seen / aren't any good. I was thinking that when I saw Okay last week, its a great performance in search of a much better script.

Pete (Pete), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:34 (twenty years ago) link

Ver Matrix was an influence on CoG? Nah, maybe not, but those funny, action-doesnn't move-but-camera-does shots are all Matrix.

You have to see it anyway, as much as you do 'A Bout de Souffle' or 'Blue Velvet' -- it's a classic of its time, if not a Classic. It's as good a film as 'City of Sadness', in my opinion better.

Enrique (Enrique), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:50 (twenty years ago) link

Good point, I had forgotten about that. Cerainly the spinny round camera stuff would not have been in there without The Matrix.

Uh oh, classic vs Classic. I thought that was the kind of distinction this threead was all about kicking into touch.

Pete (Pete), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:54 (twenty years ago) link

A knock BACK to the first Blade film (1998).

I meant to say that in a perfect world the intervening films would be seen. Making them better is a bit trickier.

Would Crouching Tiger have been made without The Matrix, or was that sufficiently a labour of love?

Tangent again: Did the Matrix break kung-fu (again) in popular America? If so was this a big thing, or just something that was obviously going to find a channel anyway, like dancehall? A generation of film critics that grew up on Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan coming into their majority? Or am I blathering away in my usual underinformed manner?

xpost - that was back when this thread was classic. Now it's been elevated to Classic, and pared down to a brand new back to basics meaning.

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Monday, 27 October 2003 13:56 (twenty years ago) link

nine years pass...

So, nine years on, what do we think about this? Are people still making 'the kind of films that become classics'?

cardamon, Saturday, 24 August 2013 21:56 (ten years ago) link

the kind of films that become comics

the arpeggio as will and idea (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 24 August 2013 21:57 (ten years ago) link

the only movie i've seen recently that made me think "classic" is Spring Breakers.

Treeship, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:07 (ten years ago) link

Movies that become classics have little to do with their subject matter or tone or 'size' and everything to do with excellent execution of the material and making a strong connection with large numbers of its viewers, so they feel like they'd like to see it again and have the exact same experience more than once.

Aimless, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:08 (ten years ago) link

also helps if they've got big cartoon robots punching big cartoon monsters in the face

the arpeggio as will and idea (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:18 (ten years ago) link

xp to aimless, i think that's half-true. truly great films transcend genre definitions because above all they succeed in being unmistakably, very much themselves. there is another kind of classic though, which is seen as a window onto a specific cultural moment, and is appreciated mostly in terms of how well it speaks to a zeitgeist that has now passed. the graduate is this kind of movie. apocalypse now. the matrix will probably be remembered in this way, as a symptom of anxieties about the digital age at the turn of the century. the reason i think spring breakers is a classic, or will be a classic, is that in addition to being great it feels very timely -- like someday people will say that it is emblematic of something.

Treeship, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:24 (ten years ago) link

basically, i think that movies that can fit into people's facile narratives about cultural trends tend to make their way into the canon.

Treeship, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:25 (ten years ago) link

Yes they do. Uncle Boonmee, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, Mysteries of Lisbon, Closed Curtains. Tons of classics this decade.

Frederik B, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:27 (ten years ago) link

La Vie d'Adèle's timing alone makes it a classic.

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:29 (ten years ago) link

Inception, prometheus, the dark knight overthinks it

firelance photographer (darraghmac), Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:33 (ten years ago) link

Leviathan, Turin Horse, Holy Motors, My Joy, Harmony Lessons, Melancholia, Post Tenebras Lux. This has been a really good decade so far.

Frederik B, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:41 (ten years ago) link

Melancholia totally. And Antichrist too.

Treeship, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:42 (ten years ago) link

It was on the last S&S poll, a year after release. Along with Tree of Life and Turin Horse.

Frederik B, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:42 (ten years ago) link

Frederik B, a good portions of those films you are listing are closer to the concept of 'masterpiece' than 'classic'. I agree for Leviathan, Melancholia, Holy Motors and Turin Horse but not for a film like Anatolia, which is one my favorite films these past years don't get me wrong.

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 24 August 2013 22:49 (ten years ago) link

I am interested to see how much the Matrix's classic rep is going to be damamged by the sequels.

Hee hee

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 24 August 2013 23:14 (ten years ago) link

basically, i think that movies that can fit into people's facile narratives about cultural trends tend to make their way into the canon.

What's disorienting though is that one generation's facile narrative about their cultural trends can be completely upended by the next generation's facile etc.

cardamon, Saturday, 24 August 2013 23:33 (ten years ago) link

oh yeah, absolutely. that's why i think spring breakers is interesting... there was a whole new inquiry pdf issue about it, and it definitely seems like the kind of thing writers feel compelled to write about, but the discourse about this movie has nevertheless been eclectic and mixed, and critics haven't really settled on their pet reductionist explanation for what it is supposed to *mean* yet. idk. "the graduate" is interesting in this way because it is a very different movie today than in 1967 owing to the fact that the "youth" movement it apparently was seen to champion no longer exists, and that generation today is seen to have a conflicted, rather than purely emancipatory legacy.

Treeship, Sunday, 25 August 2013 08:13 (ten years ago) link

i think a serious man is a classic

Superbad is a total classic.

Van Horn Street, Friday, 30 August 2013 19:43 (ten years ago) link


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