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Excess Hollywood: Random Snippets of Real LifeOverheard at Target between a twentysomething guy and a girl. Overheard at Border’s. An older man and woman. At a video store. I was renting “Sid and Nancy.” (I’d later steal it and “Freaks” from the same store.) A man in a wheelchair has cornered the clerk at my local Suncoast store, which has since gone out of business on the direct orders of God. No big loss there. I don’t like most people to begin with, but I get downright vicious when it comes to people who don’t know their asses from their mouths trying to get into a serious discussion about the merits of “Click” based solely on a DVD cover. Or what about when someone spies the DVD of a current movie called “World Trade Center” and wonders aloud, where any stranger can hear, what it is about. Do they think it’s a fucking comedy? It hasn’t been ten years yet! The Wayans Brothers laughfest, “3,000 Dead Suckas,” can’t come out until all the wounds have healed. Don’t people know any better? The point of all this? As long as people like these folks exist, films like “Norbit” will be slipped loose on the moviegoing public without any traces of irony. It’s that simple … and that scary. As long as there are people who think movies advertised on television are automatically available on DVD, we’ll be subjected to reports on the box office take of “Stomp the Yard,” which will be covered with the same amount of seriousness as a report on a cure for cancer. My advice to the young filmgoers reading this? Look around you. Take in the conversations. These people are in positions of power and prestige. Do you feel secure knowing that? Neither do I, but it provides clarity for a poll number I saw. The poll, which had a margin of error of plus or minus nine percent, was conducted by Widgery and Associates in 1994 for the year-end special of “TV Nation” (then airing on NBC with all kinds of ironic traces). Thirty-four percent of all Americans who voted in the last election (at that time) believed “Forrest Gump” was a documentary. If that doesn’t put it into perspective, nothing will. 11.04.2007 | filmthreat's blog Cat. : FESTIVALS |
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