So far this weekend I’ve knocked off another two films on my AFI Top 100 project: Network (1976) and A Night at the Opera (1935), and so far it’s been a fantastic weekend.
I know I should write more about these films, but really, you’ve gotta see these to believe ’em. When someone told me that Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip was just Aaron Sorkin drawing Network out into twenty-odd episodes, I scoffed and now I totally believe it. It makes me even more depressed that there will never be a second season of Studio 60, but I believe it. In a way, Studio 60 is an odd mash-up of homage and meta-level remake: a story decrying the sins of television on television and eventually killed by television. TV scholars everywhere should have been curling up their toes with glee at the synchronicity between the common theme of network interference between Studio 60 and Network and the network meddling that wound up resulting in the show’s feeling so wildly uneven, which, of course, led to its untimely demise. (30 Rock didn’t help much either, of course, but now I wonder if the green light for 30 Rock was given so that the executives could present the American populace with an option as to which philosophy of television they’d rather believe. That the so-called “TV Generation” would pick the more upbeat candidate should come as a shocker to no one.) Network is now, as I suspected it would be, one of my favorite films ever. Absolutely fantastic writing, acting and message, with a great blend of workhorse framing not getting in the way of the dialogue and narrative and real knock-down awesome cinematography where needed (most notably in Ned Beatty’s boardroom scene). Seriously. Well worth the money.
A Night at the Opera, of course, is one of the Marx Brothers’ most timeless classics. The Marx Brothers, like Laurel and Hardy or Chaplin, are, I think, a sort of Rorschach test of humor I myself found Groucho and Chico’s one-liners priceless but Harpo’s screwball visual gags less interesting still, in toto I loved the film completely and can’t wait to experience more of their work. Laura, on the other hand, didn’t warm as much to the film, which makes me suspect the ‘Rorschach Test’ theory. It’s also the case that my own sense of humor is, well, odd, and somewhat anachronistic many contemporary comedies hold very little appeal to me, but I find the old stuff wonderful. I like Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau more than Jon Heder and Efren Ramirez, for example; given my choices, I’d rather see old Marx brothers movies than Harold and Kumar. I liked the movie, but I liked A Night at the Opera much more.
I suppose the common element to both movies that I appreciate the most, which should surprise absolutely nobody, is the writing. Verbal wit beats slapstick in my book, and compelling, intelligently-written and brilliant dialogue coupled with a great, heartfelt message presented well will get me to make a beeline for the theater. I enjoyed Raging Bull, but I liked Network much more perhaps due to my own preference for intelligent plots; of course, at the same time, I think I liked Raging Bull a great deal more than Rocky (which I also watched last week) because De Niro is clearly a better actor than Stallone and the character was simply more complex. On the Waterfront proves that a character can be far from the sharpest crayon in the box and still complex and endearing; of this “Pugilism Trilogy” I think I may have liked On the Waterfront best, followed by Raging Bull and then Rocky. What do you guys think? Bill?
After researching transmedia storyworlds at MIT, guiding Microsoft in its CTO/CXO's think tank, co-founding Microsoft Studios' Narrative Design team, and exploring the future of entertainment and media as the Creative Director and a Research Fellow for USC's Annenberg Innovation Lab, I'm now the Creative Director for USC's World Building Media Lab, a storyteller, a designer, a consultant, and a doctoral student in Media Arts and Practice at USC's School of Cinematic Arts. more »
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