Tuesday afternoon I went for a walk. It turned out to be a much longer walk than I anticipated, taking me about an hour and six thousand steps. To be honest, it wasn’t a nice day. I didn’t take my earbuds because I thought it would “be good for me” or “build character” or some such nonsense. My only companion was Dr Pepper, and given the pace I set that went flat pretty quickly.
But at least I didn’t get rained on.
Anyway, this isn’t about that. Once I got home and had a snack I started checking my favorite websites, starting with Hollywood in Toto, where I found this interesting guest column. There’s a new social media site in town for movie lovers, and within minutes of signing up I realized it’s my new, favorite thing. Sure, there’s a film community on the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, but it’s not really for movies. There’s Letterboxd, which is fine for logging movies. I just feel like the comment system is there as an afterthought.
Criticless blends the best of both worlds.
Available through both the website and app, Criticless allows users to rate and review movies. Rather than using a star system, it offers much more liberating set of sliding scales so users can quickly see if a movie is any good, how offensive the content is, and where it leans politically. It’s also easy to see where a movie is available, which is always nice in our streaming world. Users earn badges for participating
Wait. Did I say there’s a slider for political leaning? Yes, I sure did. I’ll let Criticless explain why:
When political ideology bleeds into art it taints said art. To be willingly unaware of its presence is dangerous to our ability to maintain our values. We must watch critically. The movie critics of today are, for the most part, cogs in the media machine with whom the average American shares nothing. Our best course of action then is to go criticless and lean on each other. Stories, especially film, shape our worldview. And you’d better believe that every story expresses one of its own, explicitly or implicitly.
But enough of that.
The fact is, there’s a great community of movie lovers over there. Right now it’s pretty small, so it’s a great time to join and help build the catalog of reviews and discuss our favorite storytelling medium. Sure, there’s still some room for improvement, as there is with any new venture. But given enough time and support, I think this will be a valuable resource and fun place to hang out online.
When I first saw it, I said I might ditch Letterboxd for Criticless.
Now I think I might just ditch the website formerly known as Twitter too. That’s how good I think it is.