"I feel like there's all these voices out there, and I want to
keep contributing my voice…I think the way film criticism survives in this uncertain
landscape is by building a community. As long as you have a strong community of
people – not necessarily like-minded on the same films – but people who accept
that film criticism is an art that is well worth preserving and keeping around.
I’m heartened by the number of different voices I see."
For a film critic who has to keep
his reviews under 250 words, Time Out New
York staff writer Keith Uhlich has quite a lot to say as he joins Peter for
the podcast. Keith explains how he originally got the cinephile bug watching
films like Popeye and Spaceballs, as well as his frustrations
in making his own films at NYU. They then dive in deep to Keith's unique writing process and spar a bit over some of his more
oddball opinions (a love of The Black
Dahlia, anger toward Steven Soderbergh). Keith also explains his frustrations
over the current state of independent LBGTQ cinema (never have the words “Fuck
you, Tom Ford” been spoken with such force). Finally, the two discuss Jonathan
Demme’s The Truth About Charlie, an
often maligned remake of Charade that
inspires both of them for its visual appreciation of Paris and its overlooked
humanism.
0:00-4:50 - Opening/Act One: Establishing Shots - Remembering Tony Scott
1:41:40-2:06:18 - Act Three: Double Exposure - The Truth About Charlie (Jonathan Demme)
2:06:20-2:08:00 - Close/Outtake
Read Keith Uhlich at Time Out New York, Slant Magazine, The House of Next Door, Senses of Cinema, and Reverse Show. Also read his haiku reviews on Letterboxd.
Follow Keith on Twitter.