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<title>Blogcritics Comments on DVD Review: &lt;i&gt;The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie&lt;/i&gt;</title>
<link>http://blogcritics.org/</link>
<description>A sinister cabal of superior bloggers on music, books, film, popular culture, politics, and technology - updated continuously.</description>
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<lastBuildDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2007 16:06:42 EDT</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Comment by Dan Schneider on DVD Review: &lt;i&gt;The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie&lt;/i&gt;</title>
<link>http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/03/29/221441.php#comment-568350</link>
<description>Well, I&#039;m middle-aged, but the thought remains. Last point, one needs to get beyond the &#039;talking points&#039; style of dialectic, where key words like &#039;Bourgeois&#039;, or the like, dredge up connotations that are not there.</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">568350@blogcritics.org</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2007 16:06:42 EDT</pubDate>
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<title>Comment by Rodney Welch on DVD Review: &lt;i&gt;The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie&lt;/i&gt;</title>
<link>http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/03/29/221441.php#comment-568278</link>
<description>No problem. I always like encouraging young people.</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">568278@blogcritics.org</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2007 13:52:01 EDT</pubDate>
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<title>Comment by Dan Schneider on DVD Review: &lt;i&gt;The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie&lt;/i&gt;</title>
<link>http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/03/29/221441.php#comment-568216</link>
<description>Rod:

I think you are reading a political argument into the piece where none exists. My main point of contrast is vs.Scorsese&#039;s work, and artistically, not politically.

That you see smugness in a defense of art is unfortunately too typical these days.

When reviewing older films I always check what the old timers wrote- Canby, Kael, Crowther, Ebert, etc. The very reason I started reviewing films is because, with the exception of Ebert, the reviews are all poorly written, and all are fairly stolid, and inflect their biases into the review, as you did in your post.

I am no acolyte of Cassavetes. He&#039;s very hit and miss. Minnie and Moscowitz is not good, and Influence is overrated. Faces, however, is very good. 

Canby, however, is stolid. In many reviews he misses the most manifest things. As a writer, I try to navigate the middle between Lowest Common Denom reviews by his likes, and the masturbatory film theory sort of crap that is proliferating online.

Again, while I think this is a great film, I recognize that not all he touched was gold. Shakespeares wrote a dozen great plays, but he also wrote a dozen that are amongst the worst plays ever published. That makes him far more interesting than unadorned deific greatness.

Finally, I loathe armchair artsy intellectual Leftists (MFA scum), but that does not mean that some crits they bring of society - i.e.- that the masses are drooling idiots, are not correct. In pointing out flaws, one must not broadbrush in the inverse way your opponent does.

Thanks for the reply.</description>
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<pubDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2007 10:49:38 EDT</pubDate>
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<title>Comment by Rodney Welch on DVD Review: &lt;i&gt;The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie&lt;/i&gt;</title>
<link>http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/03/29/221441.php#comment-568215</link>
<description>I learned a lot from your review, which is thoughtful and specific and generous, and will most certainly lead me to add this to my queue. After I see it, I will likely read this piece again. 

Unfortunately, I had a problem with your smug tone. Because Cassavetes set himself up against the studios, his acolytes have (and have always had) this annoying tendency to assume that a) everything he did was pure, unblemished art and b) if you don&#039;t agree then you&#039;re part of the problem, a &quot;bourgeois&quot; imbecile who doesn&#039;t get it because you spend too much time feeding at the Hollywood trough -- and if you do get it you&#039;ll probably still need the help of an expert cineaste, as great films need &quot;someone to explain to the masses why they work.&quot; (Bourgeois? Masses? Did you eat a whole box of &lt;i&gt;Das Kapital&lt;/i&gt; for breakfast?)

Cassavetes has been a personal hero of mine ever since &lt;i&gt;A Woman Under the Influence&lt;/i&gt; -- the first film I ever reviewed, which was for a high school paper. Since then, I&#039;ve tried seeing his work when available, and it&#039;s been hit or miss. &lt;i&gt;Gloria&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;Love Streams&lt;/i&gt; were great; on the other hand, I&#039;ve yet to make it to the end of &lt;i&gt;Faces,&lt;/i&gt; which I thought was a terrible argument for improvisational acting. (On the other hand, I think Cassavetes himself was a great film actors, and his role in Elaine May&#039;s &lt;i&gt;Mikey and Nicky&lt;/i&gt; one of the greatest ever. And I still love seeing him get blown to shreds in &lt;i&gt;the Fury.&lt;/i&gt;)

Have you looked up any Vincent Canby lately? As a daily working critic goes, his body of work looks better and better. I don&#039;t always agree with him, but he&#039;s very often smart, very often sees details others miss. He was way ahead of the pack, for example, regarding the work of Fassbinder. Read his review of &lt;a href=&quot;http://movies2.nytimes.com/mem/movies/review.html?_r=1&amp;title1=Katzelmacher%20%28Movie%29&amp;title2=&amp;reviewer=VINCENT%20CANBY&amp;pdate=19770604&amp;v_id=140998&amp;oref=slogin
&quot;&gt;Katzelmacher&lt;/a&gt;, in which he is very open to a film many people find hard to watch; not only enthusiastic about the innovations (while nonetheless acknowledging the Godardian derivation) but capable of seeing the humor, the depth, and the humanity. Hardly the work of a middle-class guy from the burbs patronizing his own class.

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<pubDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2007 10:38:24 EDT</pubDate>
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