home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
031593
/
0315420.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-02-24
|
7KB
|
142 lines
<text id=93TT1149>
<title>
Mar. 15, 1993: Attack of the Blurbmeisters
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CINEMA, Page 62
Attack of the Blurbmeisters
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Sensational! Fabulous! Thumbs up! That, at least, is what movie
publicists think of quote-happy critics.
</p>
<p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN - With reporting by Georgia Harbison/New York
</p>
<p> Jeff Craig, 38, is the shadowy king of radio reviewing.
From his base in Westport, Connecticut, he produces and
distributes three daily review features, one each on movies,
videos and CDs. But although his movie segment, Sixty Second
Preview, is heard on 225 stations nationwide, chances are you
know Craig better from the bold-faced blurbs that trumpet his
opinions in countless movie ads. Craig, for example, called
Passion Fish "a triumph," Shadow of the Wolf "spectacular,"
Love Field "fabulous" and Amos & Andrew "a hilarious &
provocative comedy."
</p>
<p> Actually, Craig didn't see any of those movies. Though he
provides the on-air voice for Sixty Second Preview and sees a
couple of films a week, he freely admits that his reviews are
largely researched and written by a staff of six. Not that it
matters much to publicists for the Hollywood studios, who have
made Craig as ubiquitous a brand name in the movie world as
Dolby Stereo. He is probably the most prominent of a new crop of
movie blurbmeisters: critics and critic-wannabes who seem to
exist mainly to service the studios with glowing quotes to hype
their latest releases.
</p>
<p> Raves from respected print critics, as well as popular
broadcast reviewers like Siskel and Ebert ("Two thumbs up!"),
are still prized by movie marketers. But in the scramble to
fill up ads with gushy testimonials--especially for films
that haven't opened yet or have drawn tep id reviews--publicists are turning increasingly to a cadre of lesser lights,
mostly from radio and TV, with seemingly boundless enthusiasms.
Susan Granger, who reviews for Connecticut's WICC radio and is
now syndicated on about 100 stations, has lured moviegoers with
passionate quotes for everything from Consenting Adults
("spine-tingling, disturbing, sexy, seductive!") to Forever
Young ("a heart grabber that lifts the spirit"). Joanna
Langfield, whose radio feature The Movie Minute is carried on 75
stations, is not far behind her in fervor and omnipresence.
</p>
<p> Still, these at least are legitimate critics. More and more
blurbs are coming from broadcast reporters who do not review
films at all, but happily provide quotes for the asking. The
trailblazer for these troops was the late Jim Whaley, host for
an Atlanta public-TV interview show whose effusive quotes were
a movie marketer's dream. Today some of the most popular
blurbers are entertainment reporters like ABC radio's Bill
Diehl ("inspired, fascinating and profound," he cheered for
Swing Kids) and Hollywood interviewer Jeanne Wolf ("one of the
great classic romantic adventures," she raved of Sommersby).
The message is that boffo quotes are more important than the
source: a "Brilliant!" or "Hilarious!" looks just as impressive
coming from the Satellite News Network, the Interview Factory
or K-whatever radio as it does from the New York Times.
</p>
<p> Using rave notices to sell a movie, of course, is nothing
new, and even the most thoughtful critics can sound woozy when
their adjectives are taken out of context and reproduced in
80-point type. What has changed is the aggressiveness of the
studio publicity people and the willingness of many critics to
cooperate with them. Publicists used to wait until reviews were
actually printed or aired before picking out quotes. Now they
call ahead to get the reviews faxed or excerpts read to them.
Some critics will provide blurbs on the spot--either on the
phone or at junkets where the films are screened in advance--and only later incorporate them into a review. One well-known TV
reviewer, according to a studio source, often calls to ask for
guidance: "What do you want me to say?" No one accuses these
critics of changing an opinion to help advertise a film, but it
is clear that they are increasingly willing to tailor their
quotes in order to get their names into the national ads.
</p>
<p> With that kind of competition, it is no surprise that blurb
inflation is spinning out of control. Superlatives, even when
they mean little, are tossed out indiscriminately ("best comedy
of the year" in February). A reference to the new decade always
sounds impressive ("the love story of the '90s"). Gary Franklin,
of Los Angeles' KCOP-TV, grades films on a 1-to-10 scale that
can no longer contain his ecstasy. Chaplin and Alive! recently
got a 10+, and Beauty and the Beast even managed an 11. Pat
Collins, who reviews for New Jersey's WWOR-TV, gushes that
Falling Down is "the first real movie of the '90s," thus
raising the question of what she considered A Few Good Men
(other than "brilliant") and Forever Young ("forever romantic").
</p>
<p> A number of critics are annoyed at colleagues who supply
blurbs in advance. "It fuzzes the line between the critic and
the publicist," says New York Post reviewer Jami Bernard.
"Crafting a sentence that would read well on an ad is not the
kind of sentence that would look good in a review. It just
brings shame on us all." WCBS-TV's Dennis Cunningham, one of
the more restrained broadcast critics, blames the movie
companies for "letting it be known that they want wretched
excesses or nothing. There used to be people at the studios who
wrote ad copy. Now alleged reviewers do it."
</p>
<p> Critics more willing to play along defend their actions as
perfectly ethical. Granger says she supplies copies of all her
reviews in advance because the studio publicists would not be
able to see them otherwise. "I feel I owe them a review, bad or
good or mediocre," she says. "I don't consider it a problem
because I treat all films the same way." Langfield insists that
it is the studios' publicity tactics, not her reviewing, that
have changed since she started in 1980. "Back then you never got
a phone call from a publicist asking what you thought of the
movie, or whether you had a review you could send over. Now it's
a whole different process."
</p>
<p> Craig, for his part, defends the practice of taking on-air
credit for what are frequently the opinions of others. "It's a
team effort," he says. "Bill Clinton doesn't write all his own
speeches. Billy Crystal doesn't write all his jokes." Half his
reviews, he points out, are unfavorable, and he sees nothing
wrong with drawing attention to the raves. "I have no problem,
and neither do the people who work with me, advertising the
fact that we like a movie, putting it out there and receiving
some publicity."
</p>
<p> Our appraisal? "Smart! Innovative! Fine performances all
around! A scam for the '90s!"
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>