Neil Gablr is not often the best writer on film - his book on Disney is cheap, sentimental, soft soap - but this op-ed from the LA Times makes some interesting points. Is our cultural consciousness changing? Are films on their way out?
From his article:
The full article:
The movie magic is gone:
Hollywood, which once captured the nerve center of American life, doesn't matter much anymore.
From his article:
Today, movies just don't seem to matter in the same way — not to the general public and not to the high culture either, where a Pauline Kael review in the New Yorker could once ignite an intellectual firestorm. There aren't any firestorms now, and there is no director who seems to have his finger on the national pulse the way that Steven Spielberg or George Lucas did in the 1970s and 1980s. People don't talk about movies the way they once did. It would seem absurd to say, as Kael once did, that she knew whether she would like someone by the films he or she liked. Once at the center, movies increasingly sit on the cultural margins.
The full article:
The movie magic is gone:
Hollywood, which once captured the nerve center of American life, doesn't matter much anymore.