Keeping Your (Emotional) Distance

Filmbrain raises an essential issue:

“I have noticed a trend in the film blogosphere of critics who, while talented writers, are so damn clinical in their criticism that I find myself wondering if they actually enjoy film.

“Yet at the same time, I feel that even openly subjective critics are less than willing to go all the way — to admit that their reaction is purely emotional ... .”

The post is cast as the eternal battle between “objective” and “subjective” criticism, but I think the above excerpt states the conflict more accurately. Because criticism is by its nature subjective, the question becomes to what degree we allow our emotional reactions, particularly those that might be unique and rooted in personal context, to seep into our criticism, and to what degree we acknowledge them.

One commenter was particularly astute in adding this wrinkle to the discussion:

“An emotional reaction doesn’t necessarily have to be subjective. If a film is well-made, its form, narrative, etc. ellicit [sic] specific emotions; not everyone will feel these emotions, but that doesn’t entirely mean that the film’s emotional content is subjective.”
I’m guessing Filmbrain would put me in the “clinical” category, although we have similar experiences related to the death of a father.

Fundamentally, though, the distinction is more academic than real. Subjectivity is a given in any sort of criticism. Critics run into trouble only when they claim objectivity, in the sense that their personal opinion or argument represents an authoritative truth that cannot be questioned. A perspective, analysis, or judgment may be informed and brilliantly argued, but it’s still only an opinion.

Leave a comment

I'm a LAMB

  • bt_assoc_grey.jpg

Recent Entries

  • Box Office Power Rankings: November 14-16, 2008

    Does it make sense to get out of the way of a certain blockbuster? Or should studios try to tap into a market being unserved ...

  • Fixed Favorites

    For the first time since fall 2006, I updated the 100 Favorite Movies feature of Culture Snob. Thirteen movies were added, and 29 went away. ...

  • Box Office Power Rankings: November 7-9, 2008

    It was odd to read these two things within a few minutes of each other: On Role Models: “[T]he kind of movie you don’t see ...

  • Box Office Power Rankings: October 31-November 2, 2008

    The consensus that Kevin Smith’s Zack and Miri Make a Porno and Clint Eastwood’s Changeling were poor performers — the weakest Halloween weekend in a ...

  • Thomson Twinge

    “Have You Seen ... ?” David Thomson’s “Have You Seen ... ?” A Personal Introduction to 1,000 Films is the book that I’d been waiting ...

Most-Read Entries

Recent Comments

  • I don’t disagree, but I think there can still be subtlety in a character with a hard surface. The performance might indeed be honest, but ...

  • I think the reason Taylor Hackford directed Jennifer Jason Leigh to deliver through clenched teeth is that her character, after years of abuse, no longer ...

  • Kudos on your inclusion of “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” This film always seems to be criticized more and more as it ages. However, its ...

  • TRANSIT is one of best shorts I ever seen. Piet Kroon and Ian Harvey are together in a new movie: “Not the End of the ...

  • Two reasons I revere Martin Scorsese are: The tempo of his films and his compassion for characters on the fringe. His love of film ...

    Mike Reid
    My Movie Life
Close