I post this in April of 2020. The COVID-19 coronavirus crisis has led to people by the multi-millions, worldwide , in lockdown in their homes and neighborhoods. I hope years from now, I might come back to this post and "remember when, and its all over now."
Living through this, as a Hitchcock buff, I find myself intrigued by how the bit-by-bit build-up to a full blown crisis resembles..yes...Hitchcock's The Birds.
In The Birds, Hitchcock famously waits a long time before the birds show up by the hundreds and pretty much take over Bodega Bay. Characters only slowly notice something wrong -- too many birds massed on the phone lines; a bird that flies into a door and dies; the sole bird that pecks Tippi Hedren on the forehead.
Eventually, things accelerate: a swarm of sparrows down the Brenner home chimney and into the living room; an attack on a birthday party outdoors, and then the big attacks on the schoolkids and the town itself.
By the third act, everybody who "barely noticed" the birds acting up in the first act of the birds KNOW that the world has changed. And the Brenner family(and Melanie Daniels)..are confined to their home. Lockdown. Sound familiar?
So it was with us "real people" and the COVID-19 crisis. Word of "something out of China." Then quaratines in Europe. Then quaratines in America. Deaths occurring(like the birds who kill). EVERYBODY fully aware of COVID-19. Everybody under lockdown.
At the end of The Birds, the people make their escape from the home to the "outside world," but the future if very uncertain.
In April of 2020, that feels familiar.
Ps. While "The Birds" is most on point to this crisis..."Psycho" one film before made a variant on the theme, as did North by Northwest a film before then, The Wrong Man two films before that one....Hitchcock's Theme: Your Normal World is An Artificial Construct, everything can change in an instant...with survival as the stakes.
I don't want to start a bunch of COVID-19 threads here, so I'll add this separate thought which I find most intriguing.
Whenever this crisis ends --hopefully within 2020, in the main -- the theatrical movie business has already taken a historic hit. The problem is worldwide, though I'll linger on America, where I live.
Movie theaters are closed. No "major movies" have opened since early March. ("The Invisible Man" is the last film I was able to see in a theater.)
"Summer Movie Season 2020" is, maybe, cancelled. Most of the summer blockbusters have been moved to Thanksgiving, Xmas, and to 2021. Wonder Woman 2 has valiantly been moved from a June opening to August(usually the "dog days" of the summer movie season.) And THAT may not really happen. The new James Bond film got moved from April to Thanksgiving.
Seeing the lost summer movie season through the eyes of my movie-mad youth, that would be pretty weird, losing all your summer movie going.
And there is still a risk that 2020 loses ALL its major movies. If the theaters can't be opened(large crowds), will Hollywood simply move ALL its remaining 2020 movies into 2021?
And thus: what of the Oscars? You can't nominate movies for the Oscars if no Oscar-worthy movies are released. Possible: no 2021 Oscar ceremony for 2020 films.
A "blow" I have already noticed: The "Roger Ebert review site" -- which now employs numerous critics to review films -- has no MAJOR theatrical films to review . Mainly they are reviewing new streaming and cable fare.
A "selfish thought": Whew. Good thing this didn't happen in 2019. Marvel fans couldn't wait for the Avengers finale; QT fans couldn't wait for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood; Bong Joon-ho fans couldn't wait for Parasite. Would have they ALL been postponed for a year? ("The Irishman" was a different deal -- always intended mainly for Netflix, not theaters; it would have survived, if post production was finished.)
Meanwhile -- movie and TV production has ground to a halt. This has happened in the past with writers' strikes and actors' strikes, but this is different -- no loopholes.
And now many 2021 releases will become 2022 releases. (Of the frozen productions I've read of, I'm most missing "Killers of the Flower Moon," pairing Scorsese's two favorite stars -- DiCaprio and DeNiro -- for the first time for the director. And with Marty, I worry about his age.)
Oh, well. If there are no "major films" out there for another year or so, I can always live off the past. My DVDs, cable, streaming: decades of favorites. North by Northwest. Psycho. Bullitt. The Wild Bunch. The Godfather. Jaws. Raiders. The Untouchables. Die Hard. Silence of the Lambs. LA Confidential. Love Actually. The Wolf of Wall Street.
So do you reckon Covid-19 will be, among other terrible things, the final nail in Cinema's coffin?
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No, I don't. For a couple of reasons.
One is that I'm old enough to have seen pronouncements many times over the decades that "the movies are going to die." Broadcast TV was supposed to kill them off. Then cable TV. Movie theaters were supposed to disappear in favor of "home entertainment." And thus "big" movies (like Ben-Hur or Star Wars) wouldn't be made.
Didn't happen.
Indeed one thing that has intrigued me about Hollywood's approach to this crisis is that they DON'T want to ship movies like Wonder Woman 2 and Top Gun 2 and Disney's Jungle Cruise "straight to video and streaming" -- they believe these movies MUST be shown in movie theaters to make the big bucks.
I guess it makes sense. Say a family of five pays $10 bucks apiece to see Wonder Woman 2 at the movie theater. That's $50 bucks. Say Wonder Woman 2 is instead shown on TV for $20..for as many people as you can cram into your TV room to watch. The movie just lost $30 of income. Maybe a lot more.
Plus, theatrical markets in China and other foreign nations are...huge.
So Hollywood will wait...a year if necessary..to show those movies in theaters.
That is IF movie theaters can be opened again in a year. And IF people feel safe going TO the movie theaters.
I remain an optimist in all things. Eventually, this will pass. It will end. And people will want to go to movie theaters again. And sporting events.
If it doesn't pass, doesn't end, or if it DOES end and people still don't want to go to movie theaters... maybe the movie theater becomes a thing of the past. But movie production for home entertainment consumption -- well, that one will stick around.
I think that the interesting "short term" effect of this crisis on "the movies" is (1) No 2020 summer movie season; (2) No Oscar season(if theaters aren't "safe" by the fall -- and I guess November/December is now loaded with blockbusters as well as Oscar bait and (3) Limited output in 2021 because nothing more gets filmed in 2020.
I think you're right, film critiques and cinephiles alike have indeed been rambling about "The Death of Cinema" for almost five decades now, yet films will most likely carry on being shown in theatres for a good while still.
But I think cinephilia and the idea of Cinema as a collective experience, a shared space were people from different horizons can experience works of art -high and low, both popular and more high brow- together, where they can be confronted to sometimes disturbing and challenging ideas or world-views, and then discuss them together and critically think about them, is dying. Cinema as an opening onto the world is dying. A lot of people now prefer to watch their “contents” online, chosen from an endless list of films, specially selected by an algorithm to appeal to their taste and match their viewing history. How many Budd Boetticher, Frank Borzage, Ivan Passer, Frank Perry, Robert Aldrich, Antonioni, Bogdanovich, Charles Burnett, Robert Bresson, Jean Cocteau, Larry Cohen, Claude Chabrol, Carl Dreyer, Francesco Rossi, Douglas Sirk, Robert Siodmak (etc.) films crop up in your Netflix’s suggestion-of-films-to-watch list if you don’t specifically search for them?
I'm not horrified that films such as the MCU and DCU generic fares are being made and shown in theatres; they -or their equivalent- (bland films made by suits with no other ambition than turning a buck) have always been made. I'm just horrified that so many people these days watch them and seem to be satisfied with what they propose, how poorly they are directed, and how little they have to say about anything. I guess we have the Cinema we deserve, so the onus is on us audience as well, but all eras are definitely not equal as far as artistic vitality and creativity goes (and not just only as a matter of Cinema).
“Cinema begins were the scenario ends” said J.B. Thoret.
There is very little “cinema” to be found in many films that are shown in theatre these days. We’re surrounded by more and more “images”, and yet find less and less “shots” (i.e. composed, lit, blocked and edited with the intent of visually conveying meaning –not necessarily in synch with the meaning conveyed through the dialogues or acting featured in that shot, by the way). Just like the vast majority of TV series, these films are about nothing more than their scenario. They are about stories and characters, all indeed part of the make-up of Cinema, but Cinema is about something more: it is about an experience that has to do with contemplation, the representation of time, and space (e.g. “Time-image” as opposed to mere “Movement-image”, as Delleuze put it).
Paul Schrader said that he thought cinephilia would slowly become like classical music: it will always be there, but it will become niche. Only a handful of enthusiasts will be "film or cinema literate", and have the tools and codes to critically analyse and understand films on a level deeper than the mere surface. The vast majority of people will merely "consume" contents, flux and images, and won't be able to (or even feel the need to) understand and decode them, or critically think about what they mean, how they produce meaning, and how they relate to the world and the history of the medium.
Likewise, film critique and film review have for a large part devolved into mere “opinion” and “trivia” (not that there’s anything wrong with these –as long as they don’t try to pass for something they’re not), usually devoid from knowledge of film history, film language or any argumentative logic. As Truffaut used to say: “everybody has two jobs these days: their day-job and film-critique”.
I guess these are the multiple ways in which one could think of Cinema as "dying".
Now "moving-images"? Well, I guess they'll stick around for a while...
I think you're right, film critiques and cinephiles alike have indeed been rambling about "The Death of Cinema" for almost five decades now, yet films will most likely carry on being shown in theatres for a good while still.
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I think so. This current emergency tells the tale: the studios DO NOT WANT to show their big summer blockbusters "only on pay TV." They know that movie theaters and audiences are part of the equation -- to earn money(their goal) and as a shared experience.
Now, the NATURE of movies in theaters has changed a lot. A lot of the dramas and indiefilms of yesteryear have gravitated to cable and streaming channels. Some of the best writers have gone to TV(The Sopranos, Mad Men, Breaking Bad, Deadwood). And critics are more inclined to review those shows in depth than, say, Wonder Woman.
But I think cinephilia and the idea of Cinema as a collective experience, a shared space were people from different horizons can experience works of art -high and low, both popular and more high brow- together, where they can be confronted to sometimes disturbing and challenging ideas or world-views, and then discuss them together and critically think about them, is dying.
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Yes. To that extent, an era is gone.
Just at the "entertainment" level, I am happy in my later years to have fond memories of seeing Wait Until Dark and Jaws(and, in revival, Psycho) with full house audiences screaming away(oddly, I don't remember screams at The Exorcist.) And memories of audiences laughing so hard during Woody Allen's Sleeper or National Lampoon's Animal House that you couldn't hear the lines.
And -- perhaps with the most risk of personal embarrassment -- the memory of being in theaters where you could hear the collective sniffles and choked-back sobs(including my own) that a tearjerker like ET or Terms of Endearment could generate. As "Exorcist" director William Friedkin said: "Audiences come to movies for one of three reasons: to laugh, to cry, or to scream."
But there is something to be said for the shared experience of an audience seeing something as dramatic as Network or Cuckoo's Nest or Dog Day Afternoon(to name three of the 70's best) as a shared experience, too. All of those movies had laugh moments and "applause" moments, but there was also the shared humanity of "taking in the ideas and savoring the characters."
Cinema as an opening onto the world is dying. A lot of people now prefer to watch their “contents” online, chosen from an endless list of films, specially selected by an algorithm to appeal to their taste and match their viewing history. How many Budd Boetticher, Frank Borzage, Ivan Passer, Frank Perry, Robert Aldrich, Antonioni, Bogdanovich, Charles Burnett, Robert Bresson, Jean Cocteau, Larry Cohen, Claude Chabrol, Carl Dreyer, Francesco Rossi, Douglas Sirk, Robert Siodmak (etc.) films crop up in your Netflix’s suggestion-of-films-to-watch list if you don’t specifically search for them?
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You know, that paragraph makes the case that "movies are better than ever" -- but perhaps we are talking more of movies from the past. As long as salvageable negatives have been kept somewhere, almost 100 years of international movies (with maybe a meaty emphasis on 1930-1970) are there for the watching on streaming and cable(or special order DVDs) by new generations whose tastes may be better served by the past then by the present. Not to mention those of us who grew up on those movies and want to "go back."
I have referred elsewhere to a book I bought as a teenager in 1970 called "Interviews With Directors" and by reading it start to finish, I became acquainted with the NAMES of Bergman, Kurosawa and Fellini even if I couldn't view their films at the time(not available to me.) Well, now they are.
I would also say that it looks like the whole tradition of "books about film directors" is rather falling apart. We certainly have enough of them to write about modernly, but I guess all the articles are moving to the internet. Not many books about them out there.
I'm not horrified that films such as the MCU and DCU generic fares are being made and shown in theatres; they -or their equivalent- (bland films made by suits with no other ambition than turning a buck) have always been made.
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Yes. You could say that the antecedents to the MCU/DCU films go back to the disaster movies of the 70's or the cop buddy movies of the 80's: money was to be made.
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I'm just horrified that so many people these days watch them and seem to be satisfied with what they propose, how poorly they are directed, and how little they have to say about anything. I guess we have the Cinema we deserve, so the onus is on us audience as well, but all eras are definitely not equal as far as artistic vitality and creativity goes (and not just only as a matter of Cinema).
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Well, it evolved here. "How little they have to say about anything" is perhaps the key point, here. I've actually seen a lot of the MCU/DCU films and I watch them rather as I watched Eastwood and Bronson and Schwarzenegger back in the day: well made entertainment, nothing more , nothing less.
That said, I know that movies serve the young, and if I WERE young, I'd probably be much more connected to DCU/MCU films. I bow in that direction. For me, hell, it was The Omega Man and Westworld(1973.) MUCH cheaper versions of the same kind of entertainment.
To me, the real betrayal of the final two Avengers films was asking the audience to feel sorrow for the deaths of characters who never really died. Most of them came back to life one film later, and I can't trust the "deaths" of those who didn't. (Hell one of them already has a sequel coming.) Fictional or not, there was a "weight" to the death of Janet Leigh in Psycho(horror division) or of a key character in Terms of Endearment(drama division) that was meaningful even if fictional. Not so in the MCU.
There is very little “cinema” to be found in many films that are shown in theatre these days. We’re surrounded by more and more “images”, and yet find less and less “shots” (i.e. composed, lit, blocked and edited with the intent of visually conveying meaning –not necessarily in synch with the meaning conveyed through the dialogues or acting featured in that shot, by the way).
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I think it was David Mamet who wrote: "The movies began in the early 20th Century as a light show spectacle for the masses...and seem to be returning to their roots."
There is something to be said about composition, montage, lighting being done to "tell the real story of a film" that seems to be getting lost these days.
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Just like the vast majority of TV series, these films are about nothing more than their scenario.
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Yes. So many of these boards seem to linger on the plausibility of plot points and storylines. Fair enough, and worth talking for talk but..movies at least used to be doing thing more than just telling a story. That said...the greatest movies have a great story to tell.
I've been watching a lot of "streaming TV series these days" and they do seem to take the soap opera as their inspiration. Stories "end" but then new stories start again -- those characters who don't die simply continue the story long past the ending..and into a new story. If a story never ends...its not much of a story, is it?
They are about stories and characters, all indeed part of the make-up of Cinema, but Cinema is about something more: it is about an experience that has to do with contemplation, the representation of time, and space (e.g. “Time-image” as opposed to mere “Movement-image”, as Delleuze put it).
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Time and space are a BIG part of "the movies." I can get age-centric and say "and you only know that when you are older, looking back at the memories of seeing movies in your youth," BUT...that time experience is part of when you see the movie the first time, too. Who I was, and how I felt, WHEN I saw those movies decades ago was important THEN. Time then, time now.
But I will forever love what James Stewart said of movies: They are "pieces of time." And to watch a movie today from 1960 or 1970 or 1980 is to view a "piece of time forever preserved." Or to ride a time machine. Isn't it interesting to go back and see Jack Nicholson when he was young and thin and sexually powerful? Or when we were?
Looking at my OP, I realize that I rather "buried the lede" -- it wasn't quite so much about the massive attacks on and takeover of Bodega Bay that I am "feeling for real" right now , but rather the way I slowly, bit by bit, and then overwhelmingly, understood what was happening:
I wrote:
BEGIN:
In The Birds, Hitchcock famously waits a long time before the birds show up by the hundreds and pretty much take over Bodega Bay. Characters only slowly notice something wrong -- too many birds massed on the phone lines; a bird that flies into a door and dies; the sole bird that pecks Tippi Hedren on the forehead.
END
with this COVID-19 crisis, I read a few things and heard a few things but then one day I went to the grocery store and - huge lines suddenly, people with carts overflowing with provisions.
And then a few days later back to the store and -- no toilet paper. The entire long ROW was empty. At one local store. Then a second, then a third.
I guess you could say this was like the one bird pecking Tippi on the head, or the bird flying into the door, or the birds massing on the wire seen by Rod Taylor.
and then...it accelerated. Going to a restaurant and they had signs marking "every third table only" to eat. And one night before the restaurant had to go "take out only," I went out for dinner and our waiter informed us he was losing his job in an hour. He and the whole staff, less take-out people.
Next: a conference I was scheduled to attend...cancelled. A hundred thousand-plus dollar loss to the organization.
Its all pretty dramatic but...ala The Birds...it sort of "crept up on my consciousness" before(also like The Birds) exploding into crisis.
I think The Birds is relevant here where a movie like The Poseidon Adventure or Airport 1975 or Earthquake are not. In those movies, everything's normal and then BOOM...the tidal wave hits...BOOM..a light plane hits a jetliner...BOOM.the earthquake hits(and there are more.)
No...this crisis "slowly built up and exploded."
A movie with "similar build-up"( and in the 70's disaster movie tradition like those above) is...The Towering Inferno.
In that one, everybody's getting ready for, and then attending, a big party at the top of the world's tallest building. But architect Paul Newman and various building engineers start noticing "little things" -- overheating wires, non-responsive sensors -- and then small fires low in the building.
Finally a man is badly burned and Newman calls up to Big Boss William Holden about the fire below. Holden's response: "C'mon how bad is it, really?" A lack of belief on Holden's part -- that is remedied about ten minutes later when guests charge into an elevator and are burned to a crisp when it opens on the fire floor.
I guess I'm speaking to "living a feeling out" here -- a feeling done on a certain scale by The Birds, and a different scale by The Towering Inferno -- people living their "regular" lives slowly coming to realize that the world has changed and they are now fighting for their lives. But The Towering Inferno is one fire in one building, put out. The Birds -- like other post-Apocalyptic movies - suggests the new world will NEVER go back to normal.
My own sense of where the US is *right* now with lots of right-wing-types eager to break lockdowns, 'go back to work' etc. is that we're in the second act of Jaws (very Birds-influenced of course). The Mayor & business owners & general yahoos want the beaches open on July 4. They want to believe it's over, that the shark has been caught. *We* see with Hooper that lots more people are going to die....
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That's certainly a good analogy, too -- tracing to Ibsen's play "An Enemy of the People" which Steve McQueen filmed a coupla years after Jaws. Steve's quite good in it, with a huge head of flowing long hair and a giant beard(he looks rather like Cousin Itt) and it isn't really all that atypical a role for him -- he's a rebel, who has discovered a polluted water spring in his Nordic village and fights the city fathers(including his own brother, the mayor) over re-opening it to provide water to the citizens.
Though Jaws DID touch on the fact that the Amity community people were concerned about losing their livlihoods. And that's happening now, too. I'm seeing it.
Some wag wrote, "Our grandparents lived through the Depression and WWII. We have to sit on our couches and watch TV. Somehow, we will tough it out." A joke -- but not quite funny. Its easier to sit on those couches if a paycheck is still coming in -- if you can work from home -- but for a lot of people, that isn't happening. They are out of work, just like that and -- I don't know if re-opening is a valid proposition or not, but it aint just the coronavirus that is going to hurt people. (And I realize that "kill" is more permanent than "hurt".) Its not a great feeling, either way.
Eventually, you'll have a split: "essential" employees who get paid all the time versus "non-essential" employees who get no pay at all.
And X number of our leaders are going opposite to the Mayor in Jaws - -they are readying martial law measures if necessary to keep people in.
I guess you could say this was like the one bird pecking Tippi on the head, or the bird flying into the door, or the birds massing on the wire seen by Rod Taylor.
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I forgot one: the chickens refusing to eat their feed(noted with alarm by Mitch's mother Lydia -- I think she's the first one to really "feel the fear vibe" about what's happening.)
Rob Ager, the film analyst most famous for one of the better-documented esoteric theories about The Shining (it's all about the Federal Reserve and moves away from the gold standard to the true fiat currencies we all enjoy today (esp. in massive downturns like now), doncha know?!) has posted an interesting 40+ min treatment of The Birds on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgC2Y0DQEE0
He basically just shows how well the film holds up if you try to consistently think of all the birds in the film as literalizations of/representations of characters' psychological states. (This shows in a way how close The Birds is to later horrors (esp. in the '70s) that work by embodying/literalizing psychological states from Bergman's Shame to Exorcist to Who Can Kill a Child? to Carrie to Long Weekend to The Brood, to modern stuff like The Witch & Babadook.)
Ager ends the vid. with an understandable but also ultimately intemperate attack on Tippi Hedren's complaints of being mistreated and harassed by Hitch. You won't miss anything if you stop watching as soon as that stuff starts in the final 5 mins of the vid..
He basically just shows how well the film holds up if you try to consistently think of all the birds in the film as literalizations of/representations of characters' psychological states.
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I have always been interested in this "reading" of The Birds. I think Hitchcock was just enough of an "art film maker" that this concept may have sounded supervision of the script and direction of the film.
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(This shows in a way how close The Birds is to later horrors (esp. in the '70s) that work by embodying/literalizing psychological states from Bergman's Shame to Exorcist to Who Can Kill a Child? to Carrie to Long Weekend to The Brood, to modern stuff like The Witch & Babadook.)
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Hmm..a long list of successors. People say "The Birds started all the when nature attacks movies" but there are NOT a bunch of such movies(as their are slasher films, ala Psycho.) Perhaps only Jaws was in the same ballpark -- but it was a much bigger hit with a much SCARIER animal on the attack.
So...take THESE successors instead.
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Ager ends the vid. with an understandable but also ultimately intemperate attack on Tippi Hedren's complaints of being mistreated and harassed by Hitch. You won't miss anything if you stop watching as soon as that stuff starts in the final 5 mins of the vid..
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Oh, I might take a look. I'm happy that Tippi Hedren has survived to 90 and going strong; I'm less happy that she seems to be the only "Hitchcock leading lady" still really standing...and all her comments are negative. The other ladies were less "that way" (I was reading an old Hitchcock bio the other day and noted Doris Day saying how nice he was)-- we'll never know the truth.