David Churchill (1959-2013) |
Given the sad passing of our friend and colleague David Churchill, we've decided to honour him in a manner totally fitting to our memory of him. Since he was such a strong advocate of Critics at Large from the beginning, he was quick to initiate ideas. One thing he was quite fond of were omnibus projects like the Remembering 9/11 collection (which led to our first e-book) and the Titanic 100th Anniversary commemoration. Therefore, we felt strongly that we could best salute our late columnist by creating an Omnibus of David. From April 16 until April 24, we plan to publish – daily – the best of David Churchill as chosen by our writers.
Today's piece is from Deirdre Kelly.
– The Editors at Critics at Large.
I just re-read David Churchill’s zinger of a piece detailing his enduring affection and indebtedness to the late great American film critic Pauline Kael, and admit I several times worried I wouldn’t get through it.
Not because it isn’t cogent: David, whom I met at university, should have been on the inter-college debating team because he has always known how to build and lob a fire bomb of an argument. I was reading him and hanging on every word, convinced that other critics who denounce Kael are doing it for their own self-aggrandizement and are missing the point, as David says, of her commitment to speak the truth. David never did mince words.
And it wasn’t because it isn’t expertly written: David writes the way he talks, with a rat-a-tat clarity and intensity of focus that is by turns profound and funny, with lots of the personal invested in what he is saying. We met in Professor Cameron Tolton’s history of cinema class and both of us were undergraduates also keenly interested in writing criticism. David went to The Newspaper to write on film; I ended up at The Varsity where I wrote on dance and, well, I am getting way from myself again. It’s the reason I had difficulty reading the piece all the way through:
I am bereft.
While reading his heartfelt tribute to a critic who inspired him to become a critic in the first place – he pronounces it strongly here – I kept hearing his voice, and seeing the flash of his eyes as he grew passionate in defence of no holds barred arts criticism. What really mattered to him.
His references to his past at the University of Toronto, where I met him all those years ago, not able not to notice him for the way he used to bound up in class, hurling facts at our only somewhat bemused professor to show off his encyclopaedic grasp of pop culture when he was just 19 and fresh out of Bracebridge (“Bracebridge?” I remember exclaiming, dumbfounded at the thought. “But there’s but one movie theatre in that town. How do you know so much?” He never did tell me.) – they made me so deeply sad again for his recent and sudden parting. I could barely see the words from behind my veil of tears.
Davis had always been so forceful, and I truly had believed him when he told me he was going to defeat the cancer that took him – really, the only thing ever capable of stopping his voice. And so my lingering shock at his departure.
He was electric as an eel: brilliant, and just as quick. I already acutely feel the loss of his energy. Since learning the news of his passing I have felt plunged in darkness. I mourn my friend, and the passing of time, of course. I long again for those galvanizing days back on campus, shot through with lightening bolts of discovery, when we both were bursting with ideas and enthusiasm and nothing, simply nothing, would ever stand in our way.
I am reminded of that fervour we once shared when I read David say in his one-two-punch homage to Pauline Kael, quoting New York Times critic A. O. Scott, “She will not lead you to correct positions, but she is an example of the right way to do criticism, which is with everything you have.”
David then goes on to explain how that example made him the critic he in turn became: opinionated, impassioned, memorable.
“Write from the heart. That is what I learned from Kael from reading her and [from] that conversation I had 30+ years ago,” he says.
“I have never tried to imitate her style (who could?), but I have tried to make the personal public as she often did. Bring your guts, your life, and your point-of view into everything you write.”
Oh how sorely I shall miss that spirit.
– Deirdre Kelly is a journalist (The Globe and Mail) and internationally recognized dance critic. Her first book, Paris Times Eight, is a national best-seller. Her new book, Ballerina: Sex, Scandal and Suffering Behind the Symbol of Perfection, has just been published by Greystone Books (D&M Books). Check out www.deirdrekelly.com for book and event updates.
Still Swinging: Why Pauline Kael Still Angers So Many Critics
Film critic Pauline Kael |
In the very early 1980s, I met Kael at a book signing in Toronto at a now defunct store called Cine Books. She was in town to promote and sign her then-latest collection of essays compiled from The New Yorker. I arrived a bit late and found that there were only a handful of people left. As circumstances played out, the small crowd thinned and I found myself essentially alone with Kael. I don't know how long we talked (my memory says an hour, but I don't think so), but I remember, if not the details of it, at least sensing her seeming enthusiasm as she listened to me talk about my own desire to be a film critic (I was writing for a now-defunct student newspaper at the University of Toronto called, unimaginatively, The Newspaper). Never once during our chat, even when other people came up and then left, did I feel I was wasting her time. She restarted the conversation and on we talked. It was the sort of thing I needed as a young writer to hear words of encouragement from a critic I admired. Don't get me wrong. I was never a “Paulette,” as her supposed band of young writers who became part of her literal or figurative circle were derisively called. I had my own mind. For all the reviews she wrote that I admired, such as her stunning piece on Brian de Palma's misunderstood masterpiece, Casualties of War (1989), I found others with which I did not agree, such as her lukewarm review of Philip Kaufman's fine The Right Stuff (1983). (It was her review though of Kaufman's 1978 Invasion of the Body Snatchers that made me want to be a critic in the first place.)
As much as she was admired, she was despised. Groundless accusations of her being homophobic, or even anti-Semitic, were often thrown at her based on a misreading of her work, or by wilfully ignoring sentences that came after the bits her critics isolated as “proof.” How she was anti-Semitic is beyond me since she was Jewish, but it stemmed mostly from her denunciation of Claude Lanzmann's overrated, languid and stupefying Holocaust documentary, Shoah (1985). There's a school of thought that believes that there's no such thing as a bad Holocaust film because the subject is so important. Ridiculous. Give me Renais' harrowing and horrifying Night and Fog (1955), Max Ophuls' The Sorrow and the Pity (1969) or Spielberg's Schindler's List (1993) over Lanzmann's self-important work any day.
Kael, in later years |
Even the local media has been getting in on the bashing Kael act. The Toronto Star's Peter Howell takes Kael to task for a comment she made in 1980 about the state of films. She wrote: “[T]he movies have been so rank the last couple of years that when I see people lining up to buy tickets I sometimes think that the movies aren't drawing an audience – they're inheriting an audience.” He then goes on to say how wrong she is and then lists the 'good' films that came out in the two years before she was growing weary. He's right. There were good films, such as Manhattan and The Last Waltz, but then he also includes Days of Heaven (the pretty locust movie as I call it), The Deer Hunter (anybody tried watching it lately?) and The Shining (which Critics At Large's Kevin Courrier recently called “Kubrick's folly”. I don't agree with Kevin's assessment and will address it at length once winter comes, but Kevin's sure not alone in that opinion). Then Howell tries to say how many “great” movies there have been this year, such as, The Tree of Life and Take Shelter, both of which have received mixed reviews at best.
It's as if these critics need to take the mickey out of Kael in order to justify their own existence as critics. No you don't. Just do what she always did. Write from the heart. That is what I learned from Kael from reading her and in that conversation I had 30+ years ago. I have never tried to imitate her style (who could?), but I have tried to make the personal public as she often did. Bring your guts, your life, and your point-of view into everything you write. Don't just try to appeal to the masses as when a well-known critic put Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) on his Top Ten not because he liked it, but because he just didn't want to be bothered with the angry mail. That is just plain old cowardice. If you cannot say what you really thought of the film, then quit. Me, I loved the Jackson films (and I'm no fan of the Tolkien books) as I have said here. My opinion is always my own (another thing Kael 'taught' me), not some vain attempt to try to satisfy my peers, or some special interest group who might write you a nasty note when you diss a film they love.
Kael is still causing controversy and stirring up the shit because of what she wrote and the passion in which she did it. She still stirs up the shit because so few critics have ever managed to measure up to the quality of her work and few ever will. That's why she still delights and angers so many.
– originally published on October 26, 2011.
– David Churchill is a critic and author of the novel The Empire of Death. You can read an excerpt here. Or go to http://www.wordplaysalon.com for more information.
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