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Documentaries: It’s Either a Crisis or a Boom. BlogNosh 05/07/08
Under discussion:
Young@Heart
(2008)
Wildly divergent posts on the State of Documentary today. At
Film.com
, Eric D. Snider comes up with four “possible explanations” for why reality television is more popular than documentary film; scale of distribution (ie: the fact that most documentaries play in just a handful of cities, if they get traditional theatrical distribution at all) is not mentioned, but the “lighthearted” nature of reality TV vs. non-fiction film is. Meanwhile,
AJ Schnack
points out that the crowd-pleasing
Young@Heart
is the fourth doc to cross the $1 million mark at the box office so far this year, putting 2008 on track to be the biggest year for docs since 2003. The second-highest grossing doc of this banner year thus far is
Expelled
; in
a Pop Matters post
about why that film is “the essence of bullshit”, George Reisch dismisses its success by claiming that “early box-office indications are that it’s a fizzle.” I know reality is subjective and everything, but when it’s *this* subjective, it starts to seem like a bad joke.
Rainbow Media, the Cablevision-owned company that in turn owns IFC and the AMC network, has purchased the Sundance Channel. Bloggy bits from
Matt Dentler
,
Nikki Finke
,
Jason Guerrasio
and
Alison Willmore.
Anthony Miccio at Idolator
bemoans the lack of a “a critical backlash” to
I’m Not There
(what can I say––
I tried
), then rants for a bit about why it sucks. A salient point: “[T]here’s a
TV
movie from the ’70s that equally reveled in ’60s iconography, while revealing a little more about the music itself and throwing in a bunch of jokes to boot. Maybe not taking their marvelous meta seriously is why
The Rutles: All You Need Is Cash
doesn’t get the same boot-licking treatment
I’m Not There
is enjoying.”
Netflix and Blockbuster “subscribers are stuck somewhere between the years 2004 and 2006, unaware that movies like
Juno
and
No Country for Old Men
are out on DVD,” posits
Chris Albrecht at NewTeeVee
. “How else to explain the dearth of anything remotely resembling a “new release” in their respective Top 100 lists?”
Originally posted on:
SpoutBlog
posted on Wednesday, May 07, 2008 6:00 PM by
SpoutBlog
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