HerrSchreck wrote:Nothing for...Ophuls
Wow.
It's difficult to make a convincing argument when the example you put forth to refute my assertion of monthly "French Criterions" is itself a French Criterion. #-o
More importantly, WTF are you talking about? I'm just as excited about some of these releases as anybody else. That doesn't contradict the fact that Criterion is on auto-pilot (and has been for years). It's become formulaic:
1. License a Western European or Japanese talkie (or, if it comes to that, make sure not to release a silent on its own). North American would be best.
2. License an archival tv documentary on the work or filmmaker, add a commentary and essay by a Westerner -- call them
special features
3. Have a contemporary artist design the cover and DVD case, respect paid to the original poster artwork is optional
4. Take an auteurist approach to the marketing of the work, regardless of whether the work was originally conceived and marketed as such
Yes, as Jeff said, that's a successful business formula. I'm not denying that. But it flies in the face of their reputation that they release the greatest films of world cinema and pay the utmost respect to the work.
This problem is magnified many times over with their Eclipse line, specifically with regard to the line's mission statement. You mean to tell me that these works by Kurosawa, Ozu and Mizoguchi have been overlooked, forgotten, eclipsed? In fact, it's quite the contrary. When you open up any Intro to Film History book, those are the three Japanese filmmakers that are mentioned. Since Seven Samurai, Tokyo Story and Ugetsu are held in such high esteem in these books and Intro to Film History classes, film audiences are compelled to seek out other works by these filmmakers, such as those being released through the Eclipse line. Therefore, these Eclipse films have experienced the exact
opposite of an eclipse in the sense of being "forgotten." They certainly haven't been "lost" (how can Criterion release a "lost" film anyway?).
By and large, Eclipse has come to mean works "overshadowed" by the more heralded titles in an auteur's oeuvre -- with "auteur" meaning the filmmakers from the Criterion line's main stable. Bernard and Klein stayed true to the mission statement, but also adhered to #1 above, so it really didn't break formula. Besides, Army of Shadows SHOULD have been an Eclipse title, but I guess Criterion is allowed to play fast and loose with adherence to their mission statements.
Again, none of this means that I don't buy Criterion's product. If I didn't like their output, I wouldn't even visit this forum. That's just logic. But I also recognize the formulaic nature of Criterion's operation, how they homogenize cinema history vis-a-vis the fanbase's and media's adoration of them in the sense that if an "old" film hasn't been released by Criterion, it can't be that great. Moreover, I'm more troubled by the opposite pervasive attitude. Criterion has successfully built a brand where they can operate on auto-pilot and people will excuse it, or worse, deny outright that they themselves are complicit with the homogenization of film culture and history through a conspicuous hegemony. That's what troubles me about all of this. It's not about what
I want Criterion to release -- It's beyond me how people can mistake my point above with that thread about "Why Won't Criterion Release What I Want?" Then again, that in itself is part of my point.
BTW, Domino: "How many times is this forum going to be posed essentially identical questions about Criterion's resistance to niche cultural film markets?"
"How many times are minorities going to complain about mainstream TV and Film's resistance to supposedly niche cultural audiences?"