Orphic Lycidas wrote:Not that I care what Greenaway ever has to say but if he didn't want cinema dead he shouldn't have contributed to it by making such crap movies.
I don't agree with the sentiments expressed, but this pithy remark made me laugh!
It might only be a slight difference but I get the impression Greenaway was suggesting that cinema was
brain dead rather than dead in a Godard-esque sense. Stale perhaps might have been a better word to use.
I also agree with zedz that this isn't really anything new, either in terms of people saying that mainstream cinema caters to the lowest common denominator, or that cinema hasn't
always churned out crap along with its gems. 1939 might have been a golden year for Hollywood films, but I'm sure there were many more terrible films that got churned out and have been lost in the mists of time - it just seems worse now both because we are seeing all the films being released without the chance to sit back and evaluate which were the best and worst of the year until later, and because of the massive marketing and hype that means you can't escape a film. I often find myself keeping away from majorly hyped films until the fuss has died down and I feel I won't be prejudiced by the hype (or hating the film because I haven't been able to escape the hype for it!) - which means I've only just got to Little Miss Sunshine, Inside Man and The Departed in the last few weeks.
I can understand what Greenaway might be getting at with the comments about Stone, Stallone and Scorsese. I agree with the poster who connected the Stone and Stallone comment with their big films of 2006 - those films would fit with the idea Greenaway is trying to express of films being stale and unadventurous. Remakes or sequels to previous successes are a way of playing it safe but don't challenge the audience or the filmmakers at all.
The problem with Greenaway's comments is that they personalise his point too much - it is a general trend, not just a couple of movie stars resting on their laurels, so he has devalued what might have been a good point by turning it into an easy slight/insult (even if it did let us have a joke about The Specialist!)
Having watched The Departed the first time recently I was also left with the impression I had seen a decent, solidly made and very well written piece of work. That doesn't mean I think any less of it, because it did not contain flashy camera work, elliptical editing, convoluted camera trickery etc - in fact I was extremely impressed to see a film actually play straight and leave its complexities to the narrative for a change!
I don't have a particular preference for a certain style or genre or method of filming (the nearest I get is an irrational hatred for Michael Bay and his ilk-style of incomprehensible hyper-editing to disguise narrative inchoherence!) and I think there should be room for all types of cinema. I get as irritated when I hear people say things like "we want to open out the play for the film version" as I do when someone says "why don't they put the scenes in the correct order rather than jumping about everywhere"! I think it is more the way the material is handled that makes a film great, or poor, than the actual techniques themselves. And Scorsese is a master filmmaker, just not working on the outside fringes of cinema as Greenaway is.
On to Greenaway's films - I think he has made some amazing, powerful films. I love his early works that the BFI released on DVD, find A Zed And Two Noughts, The Draughtman's Contract and The Cook, The Thief fascinating unique works that couldn't have been made by anyone else.
Actually that last comment could be applied to all of his works, even the ones I do find poor - and that is the reason why I wish he would make more. In a perfect world I would want all talents to be recognised and financed - even if the result was some incredibly difficult work that would have a miniscule audience, or turned out to be a film that did not reach the standards of previous work. Greenaway's films are unique and thats what makes them so wonderful, and at the same time so infuriating at times! Yes, even The Pillow Book!
Anyway, with Greenaway not making major films any more what rite of passage will actors have to replace being able to make the comment "I was once naked in a Peter Greenaway film"?
