The Armond White Thread
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
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- Location: New England
- Contact:
Re: The Armond White Thread
The most intelligent (Asian) convention is putting family names in ALL_CAPS -- so that one can tell which is which, no matter what order the names are in.
JIA Zhang Ke
GONG Li
Nagisa OSHIMA
NARUSE Mikio
Maggie CHEUNG Man-Yuk
BAE Doo-na
Oh -- and I love The World (one of my favorite Jia films).
JIA Zhang Ke
GONG Li
Nagisa OSHIMA
NARUSE Mikio
Maggie CHEUNG Man-Yuk
BAE Doo-na
Oh -- and I love The World (one of my favorite Jia films).
Last edited by Michael Kerpan on Tue Jun 16, 2009 4:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Perkins Cobb
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 4:49 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
I notice now that the Land of the Lost review was already discussed, albeit without quoting the money line. Apologies for my tardiness.
However, let's not get too far off the topic of pointing and laughing at Armond, please.
However, let's not get too far off the topic of pointing and laughing at Armond, please.
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zombeaner
- Joined: Sun Aug 27, 2006 6:24 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
I love reading the comments that follow every one of his reviews. They read exactly like this thread.
- jbeall
- Joined: Sat Aug 12, 2006 1:22 pm
- Location: Atlanta-ish
Re: The Armond White Thread
Armond sure is one pretentious motherfucker, isn't he?Perkins Cobb wrote:Land of the Lost > Jia Zhang-ke.
Armond White wrote:Time-warp jokes mixing historical anachronisms with contemporary product placement recall SNL sketch writing, but Welch sets mall-culture detritus in an interplanetary/desert setting with three moons, bug-eyed aliens and dinosaurs that spark folkloric imagination: Golden Gate Bridge, Statue of Liberty, Big Boy sign, hip-hop limousine, rollercoaster, even Cadillac Ranch with lime green and purple Caddies next to a drive-in-movie screen. These are all more expressive than the scaled-down global icons in Zhang Ke-Jia’s [sic] dull art movie The World.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
Interesting Pro-White Blog Post [url=http://www.thehousenextdooronline.com/2007/12/white-power-ten-armond-white-quotes.html?showComment=1197312660000#c7818512898505542017]Rebuttal[/url] wrote:Matthew Arnold said...
Armond is a pure Paulette, no "mentoring" by Andrew Sarris involved. I'll never forget hearing him on the Leonard Lopate show, when Georgia Brown, then of the Village Voice, confronted him over an outragous claim that Armond had made about her (and which is reprinted in his collection), to the effect that she had written in the Voice (!) that "black people should not be allowed to make movies." Of course, he couldn't cite any actual passage remotely saying that, but instead of admitting he was wrong (and race-baiting while he was at it), he barked back, "It's not my job to point out your sins to you," or something equally belligerent. Lately, he's been taking it out on Georgia's son, the director Noah Baumbach, suggesting among other things that Georgia "should have had an abortion." That's some real thoughtful, first-rate criticism there, huh?
- Cronenfly
- Joined: Thu Jul 19, 2007 4:04 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
Only Armond could love The Life Aquatic but wish that the movie's co-writer had been aborted to spite one of his enemies...
- Camera Obscura
- Joined: Tue Aug 26, 2008 11:27 pm
- Location: The Netherlands
Re: The Armond White Thread
Family names in caps is the easiest solution. Everybody should get it right when this becomes the norm.Michael Kerpan wrote:The most intelligent (Asian) convention is putting family names in ALL_CAPS -- so that one can tell which is which, no matter what order the names are in.
JIA Zhang Ke
GONG Li
Nagisa OSHIMA
NARUSE Mikio
Maggie CHEUNG Man-Yuk
BAE Doo-na
- The Fanciful Norwegian
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 6:24 pm
- Location: Teegeeack
Re: The Armond White Thread
Of course the point is defeated if the writer doesn't know which is the surname in the first place. The Cannes website, for example, is loaded with examples where the given name has improperly capitalized by some code monkey who didn't know better. (There's also the issue of Vietnamese names -- they're surname-first like other Sinitic names, but it's actually standard to refer to the Vietnamese by their given names.)
In Asia, Western names are almost invariably written in their original order, with no typographical features to distinguish given and family names, and nobody seems to have much trouble with it. But here we have Zhang Ziyi's publicists telling everyone to refer to her as "Ziyi Zhang" and Japanese names being written in whichever order the writer or publication prefers (it would be nice if the Japanese themselves dumped the practice of romanizing names in the "Western" order and encouraged everyone else to do the same). Inconsistency is a big part of the problem here.
In Asia, Western names are almost invariably written in their original order, with no typographical features to distinguish given and family names, and nobody seems to have much trouble with it. But here we have Zhang Ziyi's publicists telling everyone to refer to her as "Ziyi Zhang" and Japanese names being written in whichever order the writer or publication prefers (it would be nice if the Japanese themselves dumped the practice of romanizing names in the "Western" order and encouraged everyone else to do the same). Inconsistency is a big part of the problem here.
It's obsolete for mainland names -- the current system only uses them for names like "Ma-Xu Weibang" where the person has appended their spouse's surname. Wade-Giles romanization used it for given names, but that isn't used on the mainland anymore (if it were, Jia would be "Chia Chang-k'o"). "Zhangke" (no space, no hyphen, no CamelCase) is correct, but even Jia's own films aren't consistent.Lemmy Caution wrote:Also, when I write Chinese names, I'm unaccustomed to using hyphens to link two character given names.
- kaujot
- Joined: Mon May 08, 2006 10:28 pm
- Location: Austin
- Contact:
Re: The Armond White Thread
I'd like to stick up for the codemonkeys really quick, mainly because I am one, and just point out that it is highly unlikely that anyone who coded/designed their site had anything to do filling it with content. More likely, some intern got the capitalisations wrong.
- cdnchris
- Site Admin
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Re: The Armond White Thread
Agreed. It's the data entry monkeys that are the problem.
- jbeall
- Joined: Sat Aug 12, 2006 1:22 pm
- Location: Atlanta-ish
- tavernier
- Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 11:18 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
The comments below his review are already priceless.jbeall wrote:Armond... likes Transformers???
Best one (so far):
No offense Mr White, but you are the worst movie critic in the universe. You make Rex Reed look like a genius. Why do you hate cinema so much?
- cdnchris
- Site Admin
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Re: The Armond White Thread
And you're shocked?
I love his reviews just for the comments that usually follow.
I love his reviews just for the comments that usually follow.
- kaujot
- Joined: Mon May 08, 2006 10:28 pm
- Location: Austin
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Re: The Armond White Thread
It's very easy to tell if Armond is going to like a film or not.
Just ask yourself this question:
Do the majority of critics like this film?
If yes, Armond hates it. If no, Armond loves it.
Just ask yourself this question:
Do the majority of critics like this film?
If yes, Armond hates it. If no, Armond loves it.
- jbeall
- Joined: Sat Aug 12, 2006 1:22 pm
- Location: Atlanta-ish
Re: The Armond White Thread
I know, but it's funny how his justification for the film is basically one moment that conforms to Armond's morality, allowing him to overlook the fact that the rest of the film is a) warmongering, and b) an aesthetic failure (as all Bay movies tend to be).
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rs98762001
- Joined: Mon Jul 25, 2005 10:04 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
Armond's Quote of the Day:
Joseph Kahn’s near-miraculous Torque
- cdnchris
- Site Admin
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Re: The Armond White Thread
I was working on a complex solution at work today which involved more math than I like handling and developed a headache a little after completing it. I swear the moment after reading that quote my headache instantly got 10x worse. What an idiot.rs98762001 wrote:Armond's Quote of the Day:Joseph Kahn’s near-miraculous Torque
- kaujot
- Joined: Mon May 08, 2006 10:28 pm
- Location: Austin
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Re: The Armond White Thread
Does he really have that much of a readership that justifies the NYPost keeping him on? I mean, I know his online reviews get plenty of comments, but I just assume it's a bunch of members from this forum and others trashing him. For crying out loud, he still has a job!
- John Cope
- Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2005 9:40 pm
- Location: where the simulacrum is true
Re: The Armond White Thread
Armond's been an advocate of that film for years now, since it came out. And he's not entirely wrong about it, just typically OTT in his praise. Still, that's not entirely inappropriate either given the nature of the film. It kind of calls for it, you see. And I think, ultimately, that very unapologetic, very unqualified confrontational effect is what motivates his enthusiasm. It 's part of what lies behind his championing of stuff like this and the Transporter pictures. I think he sees them as celebratory rather than cynical; joyful rather than ashamed of their genre/heritage, which is what he sees as nihilism. Also, the unrestrained hyperkinetic quality of these films allow them to transcend the banality of adhering to any kind of "real". They merely deign to proceed from a place of recognition. Their goal is to embrace a plasticity of vision, the plasticity of the medium and its potentiality for imagination. In this way, they thrust us fully into a freshly rejuvenated realm of very genuine and authentic fantasy (this is the real that counts). Certainly the great "breaking-the-sound-barrier" finale of Torque always thrills me, as does the Mountain Dew/Pepsi face-off scene which is a particularly wonderful, nuanced moment as, of course, Pepsi produces both. That acknowledgment of self-enclosure and parameters to the fantasy seems very intentional and has the effect of shaping what it can do and where it can go. It's an acknowledgment of standard product placement without it degrading the picture; rather, it's elevated through the acknowledgment of how contemporary identities are assimilated and built, a blissful light shining on the walls of Kahn's torqued-up world itself.
Beyond all this theorizing however, there is the undeniable fact that AW sees much of worth in Joseph Kahn's whole aesthetic stance as indicated here. There's a whole series of these lectures available on Youtube actually and their quite observant. Unfortunately, I still get distracted by the fact that Armond's shirt could use a good ironing (it appears to have been packed away in one of those vacuum sealed plastic containers).
Beyond all this theorizing however, there is the undeniable fact that AW sees much of worth in Joseph Kahn's whole aesthetic stance as indicated here. There's a whole series of these lectures available on Youtube actually and their quite observant. Unfortunately, I still get distracted by the fact that Armond's shirt could use a good ironing (it appears to have been packed away in one of those vacuum sealed plastic containers).
- gokinsmen
- Joined: Sat May 30, 2009 10:22 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
Is Armond's Torque worship really any worse than this?
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Vic Pardo
- Joined: Fri May 01, 2009 10:24 am
Re: The Armond White Thread
New York Press, not New York Post. It's a free paper, available in sidewalk boxes. He's the only writer of note on the staff and probably the only one who gets paid. It used to be a great paper when Russ Smith owned it. But White's reviews are the only things worth reading in it now.kaujot wrote:Does he really have that much of a readership that justifies the NYPost keeping him on? I mean, I know his online reviews get plenty of comments, but I just assume it's a bunch of members from this forum and others trashing him. For crying out loud, he still has a job!
- starmanof51
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2004 7:28 am
- Location: Seattleish
- Contact:
Re: The Armond White Thread
=D> You had me for about half of thisJohn Cope wrote:Armond's been an advocate of that film for years now, since it came out. And he's not entirely wrong about it, just typically OTT in his praise. Still, that's not entirely inappropriate either given the nature of the film. It kind of calls for it, you see. And I think, ultimately, that very unapologetic, very unqualified confrontational effect is what motivates his enthusiasm. It 's part of what lies behind his championing of stuff like this and the Transporter pictures. I think he sees them as celebratory rather than cynical; joyful rather than ashamed of their genre/heritage, which is what he sees as nihilism. Also, the unrestrained hyperkinetic quality of these films allow them to transcend the banality of adhering to any kind of "real". They merely deign to proceed from a place of recognition. Their goal is to embrace a plasticity of vision, the plasticity of the medium and its potentiality for imagination. In this way, they thrust us fully into a freshly rejuvenated realm of very genuine and authentic fantasy (this is the real that counts). Certainly the great "breaking-the-sound-barrier" finale of Torque always thrills me, as does the Mountain Dew/Pepsi face-off scene which is a particularly wonderful, nuanced moment as, of course, Pepsi produces both. That acknowledgment of self-enclosure and parameters to the fantasy seems very intentional and has the effect of shaping what it can do and where it can go. It's an acknowledgment of standard product placement without it degrading the picture; rather, it's elevated through the acknowledgment of how contemporary identities are assimilated and built, a blissful light shining on the walls of Kahn's torqued-up world itself.
Beyond all this theorizing however, there is the undeniable fact that AW sees much of worth in Joseph Kahn's whole aesthetic stance as indicated here. There's a whole series of these lectures available on Youtube actually and their quite observant. Unfortunately, I still get distracted by the fact that Armond's shirt could use a good ironing (it appears to have been packed away in one of those vacuum sealed plastic containers).
- tavernier
- Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 11:18 pm
Re: The Armond White Thread
I wouldn't go that far, but I do miss Mugger's idiotic ramblings.Vic Pardo wrote:It used to be a great paper when Russ Smith owned it.
- jbeall
- Joined: Sat Aug 12, 2006 1:22 pm
- Location: Atlanta-ish
Re: The Armond White Thread
Now that the early reviews of Transformers 2 are in, I'm even more amazed that such a self-righteous (black!) critic like Armond likes it. I'm trying to decide which is the most racist film I've seen in the past decade or so: Lethal Weapon 4, Phantom Menace, or Transformers 2?
- foggy eyes
- Joined: Fri Sep 01, 2006 1:58 pm
- Location: UK
Re: The Armond White Thread
Hilarious. It makes perfect sense to me that Armond would step out in something like that. It's very interesting watch him talk too, but I couldn't escape the feeling that there's an awful lot of pent-up frustration (and, dare I say it, hate) behind that genial exterior. Such an angry man. Where does it come from?John Cope wrote:Armond's shirt could use a good ironing (it appears to have been packed away in one of those vacuum sealed plastic containers).
Anyway, JC, I always value your posts & opinions, but just can't get my head around your point of view here.
So, in order to make vindicate Torque (and others), any kind of "real" must, by comparison, be relegated to the "banal"? Any kind? What does that even mean?the unrestrained hyperkinetic quality of these films allow them to transcend the banality of adhering to any kind of "real".
I looked this up on YouTube, and you might have to expand on what is "wonderful" or "nuanced", rather than ham-fisted and downright ugly, about the sequence. Imaginative potential?Certainly the great "breaking-the-sound-barrier" finale of Torque always thrills me, as does the Mountain Dew/Pepsi face-off scene which is a particularly wonderful, nuanced moment as, of course, Pepsi produces both. That acknowledgment of self-enclosure and parameters to the fantasy seems very intentional and has the effect of shaping what it can do and where it can go.
Also, on a side note, I wish Armond wasn't so patronising towards "pop culture" - the models he uses as exemplars of "pop" art are, from what I can tell, invariably simplistic, lurid, brash, abrasive, overly sentimental, etc. I have no idea why he so often confuses barrel-scraping with "essence".