Last month I watched nine movies. Compared to some of my online friends, that’s not very many. Unfortunately, most of my media consumption is podcasts and YouTube videos. As I write this, it’s not quite nine o’clock in the morning and I’ve already listened to several hours of podcasts at 2x speed. Back in film school I watched a couple of movies at 1.5x and I’m not proud of that.
Watching sped up movies is probably more insulting to the filmmakers than watching them on your phone.
At any rate (see what I did there?), after I finally finish a movie (sometimes it takes me several attempts) I try to share a few thoughts on Criticless even if I’m writing a longer post elsewhere. Assuming I’m writing a proper, 500-750 word review, how do I approach it? My mind has always been wired differently when it comes to TV and movies. I can’t help but fixate on things other people don’t notice.
Film school made it worse. Or made me better. Take your pick.
So when I sit down to watch a movie for review, the first thing I note is the opening image, which sets the tone for the experience to follow. Don’t doubt for a moment that the director and editor thought long and hard about that first frame. Sometimes the opening image gives us a clue of things to come, and sometimes it eases us into the main character’s ordinary world.
Sometimes identifying the main character isn’t easy.
When we think of Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl we think of Jack Sparrow. The first character we see is young Elizabeth Swan. Later we’ll find that neither of them is the main protagonist. Jack Sparrow is a trickster guide, Elizabeth is the love interest, and we don’t meet Will Turner, the main character, until basically everyone else is introduced. What makes him the protagonist is defined by his journey. Will is the character who is called to adventure, who is inspired by the love interest, and ultimately becomes his true self.
But if you don’t know the definition, you don’t know what to look for.
Every movie has a theme, and if you listen closely you can often catch a thematic statement. I don’t obsess over identifying it, but when I do I keep it in mind. At some point early on someone will proclaim something about truth or reality. Then the rest of the movie wrestles with whether or not this argument is correct. Just because it’s said by the villain doesn’t mean the movie will lean towards his being wrong. Just because it’s said by the wise old mentor doesn’t mean the movie will decide it’s true.
The thematic statement is open to debate. But every movie is about something.
Good movies just ask the questions and leave room for the audience to decide how accurate those arguments are. A movie with an agenda is unvarnished propaganda, which is generally unpalatable. I appreciate a movie that makes me pay attention and dig deep before I can develop a theory about what it’s really saying. Just keep in mind, even the most brainless blockbuster has a thematic statement, so whether or not you hear it spoken, someone is expressing an opinion about deeper reality.
But watching movies isn’t all deep thinking.
Most films follow the same structure, so knowing what comes when helps me keep my bearings in the story. And because Hollywood loves being self-referential, major story beats are occasionally homages to classic films. Rookie of the Year lifts a moment directly from The Wizard of Oz, but uses it for the same purpose. If we’ve seen the The Wizard of Oz we sense, even if we don’t realize it, what’s about to happen. More than just Easter eggs for movie lovers, moments like that show appreciation for storytelling traditions.
Watching lots of movies makes you appreciate movies more.
Obviously, I do all the other things everyone does. I pay attention to camera angles and lighting, the music, and the dialog. We all know what’s appealing, which artistic risks didn’t pay off, and what is shameless self-indulgence. I don’t know need to get into that here. But when it’s time to write my review I have to introduce the characters, summarize the first half of the plot, point out the questions the movie asks, and argue whether the movie succeeds or fails on a technical level.
To do my job though, I have to be an active watcher.