Thursday, January 8, 2009

Armond White Hates You

Apparently, I should know a lot more about Armond White than I do. According to his Wikipedia entry, he is the most controversial, published, prolific, amazing, debonair film critic of all time. That entry was written by Armond White because Armond White is the only person that doesn't hate Armond White. Coincidentally, Armond White is also the only thing Armond White doesn't hate.

When I first started to read some of his blurbs on RT, I almost wanted to conclude that he was just a contrarian who "wants attention," which is a quote I've lifted from every single Rotten Tomatoes user ever. That'd be wrong though; Armond White doesn't want your attention, he wants to hurt your feelings (unless you're Steven Spielberg). Armond is the real-life version of Anton Ego, a cartoon caricature from a movie about a cooking rat, and a stereotype I didn't know existed in film criticism anymore. I'd say the average mainstream moviegoer often agrees with the view that film critics hate all the films the masses love and vice versa. Armond White, in all his postmodern glory, flips this on its head: he hates everything that movie critics love (as well as audiences) and, very rarely, vice versa.

Armond White says things like this:
As for the “art” of criticism: No amount of fancy wordplay can excuse the destructive effect of praising offal like Before Sunset. (That’s not a personal attack, it’s a defense against the injury of bad criticism and poor taste.) I don’t read criticism for style (or jokes). I want information, erudition, judgment, and good taste. Too many snake-hipped word-slingers don’t know what they’re talking about—especially in this era of bloggers and pundits. That’s why a hack like Michael Mann gets canonized while a sterling pro and politically aware artist such as Walter Hill is marginalized. Let me be more blunt: I am not the least bit interested in reading the opinions of people who don’t know what they’re talking about. There, I’ve said it.

Holy crap, really? This kind of talk still exists in film criticism? I really had no idea. And the fact that he hates blogs makes this feel like we're aping Fire Joe Morgan even more. Also, I seriously had to argue with myself over whether or not I should end every paragraph in this entry with "There, I've said it."

I've said it before: we're not here to judge opinion. Anyone has a right to like or dislike any film for whatever perfectly subjective reason. But I do have a problem with critics who are contrarian for the sake of it, jerkoffs like White who actually think their opinion is worth something when it's so obviously stuck in the critical context of whatever film they're shitting on. When it comes down it, this guy might be the Skip Bayless of film criticism, except, you know, no one takes Skip Bayless as anything more than the punchline of ESPN2. Then again, Skip doesn't try to convince us that he "knows what he's talking about." Armond believes that he is the authority. Wow, I honestly never thought that I'd be writing these things here, and this is only my third post! I sound like everyone I've ever met who hates critics.

Anyway, here's a list of movies that Armond White has given a negative review to, and keep in mind that when I say "negative" I mean "he absolutely hated these movies." They were all released in 2008 and had Rotten Tomatoes scores above 90%:

The Wrestler (98%)
The Class (97%)
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (97%)
The Dark Knight (94%)
Iron Man (93%)
Slumdog Millionaire (94%)
Milk (93%)
Encounters at the End of the World (93%)
A Christmas Tale (90%)

And here are some more movies that he didn't personally review for NYPress, but going from what he wrote in the article I'm about to look at, we also know he hated:

Man On Wire (ONE HUNDRED PERCENT AFTER 136 REVIEWS)
Let the Right One In (97%)
WALL-E (96%)
Frost/Nixon (91%)

On the other hand, he liked "Happy Go Lucky"! "And Rachel Getting Married"! I think that covers every single 90%+ movie of the year. 2007 looks very similar, but we won't go into that.

So what are some of the reasons Armond White might hate a movie? These:

1. If he left the theater feeling like this: ='(. He doesn't like movies that are depressing, or glib, or cynical. It seems that he doesn't like movies that don't carry a positive message throughout. It's probably the only thing that saves him from being a complete caricature of a film critic—but it's also incredibly weird and shows that, although he's apparently a master of film discourse, his mind is closed to a vast expanse of movies.

2. Politics! I'm not entirely certain exactly what politics we're talking about here… he seems to hate them all. But no matter what, he can't seem to get through a film without placing it in a political context and judging it from that vantage point.

3. Class! If a movie tries to be good while simultaneously being set in a low-class environment with poor characters, the only reason critics and audiences would love it is because they're all upper/upper-middle class white people who are overloaded with guilt. Thus, there is no conceivable way for the film to be good. Movies are not allowed to be made about people who are poor.

Coincidentally, there's already a blog out there, called Armond Dangerous that already aims to criticize his reviews in similar fashion. Unfortunately, it hasn't been updated since March 2007, but... it's (admittedly) fortunate for us that we're able to pick up the mantle. It was a fantastic blog, though, and I wish I didn't just discover it a few hours ago.

I've gone almost two pages in MSWord without actually getting to any review, so I'll probably keep it short (this turned out to be a lie - ed.). You should know this: when you're in the business of being the Incredibly Annoying Contrarian Stereotype, it's important that all contrarian reviews include potshots at other, well-received films*. So, in what I expect is in typical White fashion, the guy doesn't write a "Best Of 2008" list, he writes a "Better-Than List," in which he only praises his favorite movies by comparing them to all the movies he hated that everyone else loved. That's so Armond!

Most of these high-profile films insult one’s intelligence, while the year’s best movies vanish from the marketplace for lack of critical support.

Yes, lack of critical support is what's really killed these movies. Unlike "Man On Wire," the best-reviewed film of the year and possibly ever, which easily broke the revenue record of "Titanic" in a month flat.

This tragedy is exemplified by the scary acclaim for the year’s worst: The atrocious Slumdog Millionaire and Pixar’s hideous Wall-E, the buzz-kill movie of all time. Trust no critic who endorses them.

Seriously? Buzz-kill? WALL-E? How can this guy actually consider himself a snob? Does he think this is how book critics think about novels? Like, fuck Grapes of Wrath cause it's about the depression (and poor people, and there are politics somewhere)? Regardless of the context—WALL-E is the most smile-inducing film I've ever seen—these are the kinds of statements that would be made by a critic whose main goal is to warn the mainstream public about movies that might make their kids sad. That isn't the M.O. (wall-e joke lol) of critics who actually take the art seriously. What the hell, Army? (going to call you Army from now on)

Also, Armond White seriously believes that Armond White is the only critic you should trust.

Happy Go Lucky BETTER THAN 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days Mike Leigh devises a thoroughly humane heroine (Sally Hawkins) whose anti-capitalist faith (deeper than bourgeois “feminism”) upbraids the pity-party of two abortionhorny Romanian co-eds.

Likes: communism (liberal?)
Dislikes: "feminism" (conservative? "conservative"?)
Dislikes: Abortions? (conservative?)
Likes: creating words like "abortionhorny" (I hate you)

True or False: "abortionhorny" is the pinnacle of "fancy wordplay."
True or False: "abortionhorny" is the nadir of "fancy wordplay."

I haven't seen either of these movies, but uh oh, here he goes again, hating on a movie for being about something sad. ='( I love how he juxtaposes a movie that is apparently the most depressing chunk of celluloid you'll ever see with a movie about a girl who's just too darn happy. You really like making this easy, Ary.

The Witnesses, Jump the Broom BETTER THAN Milk Andre Téchiné’s AIDS history joined Ian-Patrik Polk’s gay-marriage rom-com to show how sexual politics enhance our lives. These films rendered silly the hindsight celebration of an ambitious pol—and the Prop. 8 protests that misread Gus Van Sant’s opportunism.

This is great because of "Gus Van Sant's opportunism." Are there actually people out there who think the movie was an attempt (from the very beginning), to exploit the result of Prop. 8? Does Armond actually believe that Gus Van Sant set out to make a movie for this purpose? Like Gus said to himself, "I've GOT to make this movie, because it'll invariably be released two days after people vote on an election measure I don't know about yet because this movie was written long before all that happened!" Does he actually think that a director decides when his or her movie is released? I thought you knew what you were talking about! There, I've said it!

Rachel Getting Married BETTER THAN Frozen River Jonathan Demme rehearses multi-culti heaven rather than condescend to hard-luck working-class women.

See rule #3.

Transporter 3 BETTER THAN The Dark Knight Olivier Megaton, Jason Statham and Luc Besson reinvent the action movie as kinetic art, but impressionable teenagers mistook Chris Nolan’s nihilistic graphic novel for kool fun.

Oh yeah, he really loved "Transporter 3." Cool, I guess. Whatever.

But the important thing is that Armond White thinks that a film that has grossed about a billion dollars worldwide has done so because of impressionable teenagers… who wrongfully had fun watching it. I'm imagining him walking into a packed movie theater, glaring at the audience and screaming "Stop having fun! This movie has a message of nihilism! STOP HAVING KOOL FUN"

CJ7 BETTER THAN Wall-E Stephen Chow endowed a poor kid’s action figure with numinous potential (a tribute to the still-extraordinary E.T.), while Pixar twisted its standard formula into ugly, end-ofhistory cynicism.

Blah blah blah cynicism. I guess he was also angry at the "liberal" "message" (dear piss christ it was a movie about robots falling in love) so put another tally next to Hates Liberals.

Shotgun Stories BETTER THAN The Wrestler Jeff Nichols’ moving Red State family feud tragedy was ignored by Blue State critics who prefer white-trash WWF stereotypes to encourage their sense of class superiority.

ahahaha people like the wrestler because of "class superiority"

oh lord

that's exactly it

I guess Armo was expressing sympathy for the lower class by writing "WWF" instead of "WWE"? How masochistic is he? He knows he's high class, so he absolutely refuses to enjoy any movie that doesn't seem perfectly tailored to him.

This makes me sad inside.

My Blueberry Nights BETTER THAN The Curious Case of Benjamin Button Wong Kar Wai’s visionary romanticism explores existential loneliness, but David Fincher merely remade Titanic as Forrest Gump—an endless, two-hankie Kubrick movie for fanboys.

I also disliked Benjamin Button, but what the hell is this reasoning? I'll give him Forrest Gump, but… Titanic? Huh? No jokes here, there is very, very little the two movies shared in common.

And fanboys of what, exactly? I don't think Armond understands the meaning. Is the movie for all the fanboys of Fitzgerald's original story? It's been a while since I've gone to an F. Scott Fitzgerald convention (Fitzucon), so I don't really know if the subculture is still thriving. I swear, though, I was the best Amory Blaine there, three years in a row.

RocknRolla BETTER THAN Slumdog Millionaire Guy Ritchie comes into his manhood with this rich, Dickensian gangster comedy, while Danny Boyle gives colonialist Britain the last laugh in his epic Indian game-show travesty—a defilement of what Dickens revealed about character and society, humor and pathos.

The class whining isn't limited to Americans! British people are not allowed to make movies set in India. Danny Boyle himself killed over two hundred Indians in his own personal attempt to colonize India, because he is British and that is what British people do.

Except Charles Dickens, of course.

Gunnin’ For That #1 Spot BETTER THAN Man on Wire Adam Yauch brings fresh imagination to this Rucker Park bball documentary, extolling youth, class and American splendor; the other commemorates an egotistical stunt.

A dude TIGHTROPED ACROSS THE TWIN TOWERS. I don't give a shit how egotistical it was, I wanna watch a movie about it.

Twilight BETTER THAN Let the Right One In Catherine Hardwicke finds her métier in an outsiders’ romance disguised as a vampire movie; she turns Stephenie Meyer’s book series into a Brontë-esque vision, especially compared to the dismal Scandinavian J-horror rip-off.

J-horror rip-off. There are about ten million real, actual J-horror rip-offs, horrible low-grade adaptations of Asian horror films. And you pick a movie that is barely even a horror film.

I wish Victoria Alexander would smack some sense into you, Armony.

Cadillac Records BETTER THAN Synecdoche, New York Darnell Martin treats Black American history as R&B and her sizzling cast (Jeffrey Wright, Beyoncé, Eamonn Walker, Columbus Short, Mos Def, Cedric the Entertainer) salutes pop music legends. Charlie Kaufman’s Actors Studio cast merely imitated Fellini’s 8 1/2 like amateurs.

This is just great because all the other movies have at least something to do with each other, and these two were the outcasts the teacher had to pair up herself before activity time.

This is the beginning of a long, strenuous relationship, Armond.


* This is the blurb from Armond's review of "I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry":

It’s a modern classic (despite a cheap-shot plug for Giuliani). By comparison, Hollywood’s most celebrated gay comedies -- In and Out, Chuck and Buck, Blades of Glory, even the laughable Brokeback Mountain -- were all failures of nerve.

This post couldn't help but be as long as it was, I think.

6 comments:

Max said...

Was he joking or does he honestly think Blades of Glory is either a "gay movie" or especially celebrated?

Also bigs lols for being cynical about percieved cynicism in movies.

Anonymous said...

I want information, erudition, judgment, and good taste.

I wouldn't care that he hates almost everything and possesses an arrogance far out of proportion to his intellect and abilities, but come on, Armond, dial the pretentiousness back a notch.

This is the guy who described the remake of The War of the Worlds as hallucinogenic. He wants information, erudition, judgment, good taste - but can't seem to get his tiny mind around the English language.

It's funny that he should mention information and good taste. In this age of the internet I can find all the facts about a movie I want easily enough. I wouldn't go to a review for that. As for good taste, obviously that is subjective and in this case meaningless.

Normally, I'd feel sorry for a guy like this. He tries so hard, but he's just so, so dumb. Were it not for the unjustified arrogance, I would feel sorry for him.

Anonymous said...

Oh, yes, and his trashing of blogs. Newspaper film critics, like many columnists, are no different than bloggers - except they get paid. Somehow what he writes, which is indistinguishable from blogging, is superior because of the paycheque that comes with it. That's some rock-solid logic there, Armond.

La Monde Against Armond said...

I hate whatever Armond White writes (if you can call that writing). Armond is an idiot. Period.

Anonymous said...

WALL-E rocks! Armond White has no heart, no brain, no conscience, and no taste. All of Pixar's movies are stunningly beautiful and amazing, and anyone who doesn't think so is a retard.

Pablo Martín Podhorzer said...

"Cars 2" (2011). Sadly, Armond was right all along. "Toy Story 3" is not good either. I felt it when I saw it, but I could not express what was wrong with it.