------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
<FONT COLOR="#000099">Small business owners...
Tell us what you think!
</FONT><A HREF="http://us.click.yahoo.com/vO1FAB/txzCAA/ySSFAA/zgSolB/TM";><B>Click 
Here!</B></A>
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

Please send as far and wide as possible.

Thanks,

Robert Sterling
Editor, The Konformist
http://www.konformist.com
http://www.konformist.com/botm/volume05/botm0701.htm


Beast of the Month - July 2001
Michael Bay, Big-Budget Blowhard Director

"I yam an anti-Christ..."
John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) of The Sex Pistols, "Anarchy in the UK"

"I ran into him once. I said, 'Hello, Michael, my name is Barry
Sonnenfeld.' He said, 'Hi, Barry.' And I said, 'Hey, how is your
little meteor movie coming?' He was about to start
shooting 'Armageddon.' And he looked at me and he said, 'It's not
little. It's very, very, big and very, very, expensive.' And I
said, 'I'm sorry. I know it is, and you're a really good director.'
But by the way, I hear he has a very large penis."

Director Barry Sonnenfeld on Michael Bay, in a Newsweek Magazine
interview


Memorial Day weekend is, traditionally, the opening shot of the
summer movie season.  It is the time of the start of the season of
blockbusters.  This year, the weekend was reserved for one film, and
one film only: Pearl Harbor.

The reason it was reserved solely for this flick was that, at least
according to conventional wisdom, Pearl Harbor was the guaranteed
smash hit film of the summer.  It had a surefire formula, already
practically patented by Michael Bay (the film's director and The
Konformist Beast of the Month.)  The film had young attractive
actors, an immense budget, an uncomplicated script, and lots of
action and explosions.  This film couldn't fail.  And, whenever it
would break the magical $200 million mark in U.S. box office, Bay
would join the elite level of directors who have had two films bust
the megahit barrier: Steven Spielberg (though he needs no
introduction, E.T., Raiders of the Lost Ark, Jaws, Jurrassic Park,
Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan are among his masterpieces),
George Lucas (no intro necessary as well, but the entire Star Wars
series is his creation), James Cameron (Titanic and The Terminator
series), Robert Zemeckis (Forrest Gump and Back to the Future) and
Chris Columbus (Home Alone as well as the soon-to-be released Harry
Potter film.)  Only Spielberg and Lucas have directed back-to-back
$200 million hits, and Bay's previous flick, Armageddon, achieved
that level of success.  (As a comparison, here are some recent
directors of note who haven't busted the $200 M level even once:
Stanley Kubrick, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese and Oliver
Stone.)  Not too shabby, considering Bay is only 36 and has only
directed four films.

A funny thing happened on the way to box-office gold: Pearl Harbor
hasn't quite lived up to the hype.  With other flicks down the
pipeline, Shrek and likely The Mummy Returns already appear to have
outperformed Bay's film.  It may still make $200 million, but
considering the huge costs behind the promotion of it, that hardly
seems worth celebrating.

What went wrong?  Perhaps it's a case of too much hype.  Or perhaps
it's a case of what noted twentieth century poet Nikki Sixx (of
Motley Crue) once pointed out: "Paint a garbage can platinum, it's
still a garbage can."

Pearl Harbor is a disaster of a film.  It revolves around a romance
which is unromantic, and thrills which are unthrilling.  Without a
single character that is worthy of any empathy, it lumbers painfully
for three hours without anything worth feeling for.  As master film
critic Roger Ebert put it, "Its centerpiece is 40 minutes of
redundant special effects, surrounded by a love story of stunning
banality. The film has been directed without grace, vision, or
originality, and although you may walk out quoting lines of dialog,
it will not be because you admire them."

Sadly, this is a step up from his previous megafilm, Armageddon.
This two-and-a-half hour 1998 clunker, about a deadly meteor ready to
destroy earth and a ragtag gang of gung ho misfits sent by Uncle Sam
to stop it, had a ludicrous plot and cardboard characters (as well as
another unconvincing romance) which was miserably covered up with
glossy cinematography, a booming soundtrack and high-tech special
effects.  As Ebert once again put it: "Take almost any 30 seconds at
random, and you'd have a TV ad. The movie is an assault on the eyes,
the ears, the brain, common sense and the human desire to be
entertained. No matter what they're charging to get in, it's worth
more to get out."  Considering its immense budget, dollar per dollar,
Armageddon is undoubtedly the worst film ever made.

Did we mention huge budgets?  While Titanic is certifiably the all-
time champ for the "Bigger Is Better" mentality, Armageddon and Pearl
Harbor are the current runners up.  Both films, when you combine
costs of production and marketing, broke the $200 million dollar
barrier once again.  Bay's films are the ultimate example of empty
excess.  (Freudians will suspect, like Sonnenfeld, that there appears
to be some form of penis envy in his quest for big budget flicks to
conceal his lack of creativity and other assets: coincidentally, Bay
was dating gigantic fake-boobed porno gang-bang slut queen Houston
last year.  Bigger is indeed better.)  His films may look great, but
there is no there there.

Of course, why does making crappy, expensive films qualify Bay for
certifiable Beasthood?  After all, at a time of swindled
presidencies, fraudulent energy gouging schemes and oppressive global
trade and finance cabals, isn't this missing the big picture?

Not in the least.  For the magnum crapus which are Armageddon and
Pearl Harbor IS the big picture.  It is a sign of a collapse of
vision, a collapse of film to challenge and inspire the public.

The period from 1968 (when Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece 2001 was
released) to 1980 (the year of Scorsese's Raging Bull) is now revered
by many fans of cinema as the greatest period in film history.  That
could be debated, but look at the films of the period: Easy Rider,
M*A*S*H*, A Clockwork Orange, The Godfather, American Graffiti,
Chinatown, Jaws, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Taxi Driver, Star
Wars, The Deer Hunter, Apocalypse Now.  That's a pretty hard list to
argue with.

Much has been made of the downfall from this decade, and a lot of the
blame has been unfairly heaped on Spielberg and Lucas for creating
the blockbuster mentality.  That seems to be a cheap shot: their
biggest hits (Star Wars and E.T.) were not expected to be the box
office booms that they turned out to be, and both were quite daring
works.  Still, success breeds imitation, and the blockbuster was
formulized and refined by lesser quality hacks.  Of particular note
was the producing combo of Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer, who
perfected their crass pitch during the eighties with brain dead
flicks such as Top Gun.  Simpson and Bruckheimer (and, later, after
Simpson died of a drug overdose, Bruckheimer alone) became the
producers for all of Bay's films.  (Top Gun, of course, is an
archetype for another common trait to the Bay cinematic style: phony
machismo.  Though his films are often described as "testosterone-
driven", they're in fact quite wimpy and without spine in story-
telling bravado, using shallow attempts at manly behavior to prove
their supposed toughness - which is betrayed by the overtly
homoerotic relationships of the male characters.)

It isn't a coincidence that as the state of cinema has deteriorated,
the public after the late sixties and seventies has become less
political and critical.  Film is, simply put, the true national
mythology.  When moviemakers don't dare the masses, they become
ignorant and apathetic.  Could the so-called "Reagan Revolution" ever
happened if people were still watching Apocalypse Now instead of Top
Gun, 2001 instead of Armageddon, Taxi Driver instead of Pearl
Harbor?  It is arguable that the reactionary nature of societal
trends was fueled by the movie industry rather than merely reflected
in its work.

Now, in the year Kubrick devoted his most successful film to, where
are we at artistically in film?  Face it, the state of cinema is in
shambles.  So far, 2001 has been a notoriously terrible year for
movies.  When it comes to worthwhile films to watch, there's been
pretty slim pickings: Shrek, Memento, Blow, and perhaps A.I.,
ironically enough the Spielberg-Kubrick collaboration.  That's pretty
much it, and even the greatness of these films can be debated.

There is something else going on in film right now.  Some, including
Mickey Z. (contributing editor to both Disinformation and The
Konformist) have criticized Pearl Harbor not merely for its inept
filmmaking, but for being historically inaccurate.  That may be the
case, but considering the sorry affairs of other films, this hardly
seems to be a fault.  After all, Moulin Rouge is based in the late
nineteenth century, yet includes a character performing
Madonna's "Like a Virgin."  (And a note for viewers of A Knight's
Tale: the rock band Queen was not singing "We Will Rock You" in the
middle ages alongside Chaucer.)

Perhaps this is just a coincidental fad.  Or perhaps it is just a
dumbing down of movies to lower our standards.  If people don't
understand, for example, that Queen and Chaucer are from two
different time periods, they can effectively be said to not
understand history.  And a public that has no grasp of history can be
easily molded.  This isn't a good sign.

Whatever the case, Michael Bay has arguably tied up one honor in his
short film career.  Though he's only directed four films, he may very
well already be the worst director of all time.  That title has long
been regularly given undeservedly to Ed Wood, the trashy B-film
director played by Johnny Depp in a 1994 Tim Burton film.  But it's a
cheap shot: for all the lack of money and talent that Wood had, he
had passion, and there's more passion in a single shot from a Ed Wood
film than the entire oeuvre of Mr. Bay.

In any case, we salute Michael Bay as Beast of the Month.
Congratulations, and keep up the great work, Mikey!!!

Sources:

Easy Riders, Raging Bulls : How the Sex-Drugs-And-Rock 'N' Roll
Generation Saved Hollywood
by Peter Biskind

Reviews, Armageddon and Pearl Harbor, Roger Ebert
Chicago Sun Times ( http://www.suntimes.com )

Ed Wood
Directed by Tim Burton, 1994

Nightmare of Ecstasy
Rudolph Grey, Feral House ( http://www.feralhouse.com )

The Big Book of the 70's, Jonathan Vankin (Paradox Press)

The Konformist
http://www.konformist.com
Robert Sterling
Post Office Box 24825
Los Angeles, California 90024-0825
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

If you are interested in a free subscription to The Konformist
Newswire, please visit http://www.eGroups.com/list/konformist/ and
sign up. Or, e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
subject: "I NEED 2 KONFORM!!!" (Okay, you can use something else, but
it's a kool catch phrase.)




Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/




Reply via email to