Category Archives: dig the critics

bogdanovich picks the classics

Every ten years since 1952, Sight and Sound Film Magazine has asked a selection of international film makers and critics to compile lists of what, in their opinions, are the ten greatest films of all time. These lists serve as ballots for the supposedly authoritative top ten list that the magazine publishes. It is Citizen Kane‘s chart-topping dominance on this survey since 1962 that, I believe, has lead to its reputation as The Greatest Film Of All Time. Kane didn’t even crack the top ten in 1952. It fell into the runners up catagory with the dubious likes of Chaplin’s Verdoux.

1952

In addition to publishing the “winners” list, the magazine also prints all of the ballots, which usually make for more interesting reading than top ten. Often, the compilers cannot resist writing a short note either apologizing to films or directors excluded or explaining that had they been asked another day, they’d have compiled a completely different set of films. Here are the ten films that were blowing up Lotte Eisner’s skirt in 1962 and her brief note explaining why she chose what she did (she was still carrying a torch for Verdoux!).

eisner

Fast forward ten years and Peter Bogdanovich, whose films I quite like up to and including the great They All Laughed (which ranked on Tarantino’s 2002 Sight and Sound poll), is asked to weigh in. Along with his top ten films, he added what is without a doubt the most pretentious note in the fifty years of the poll.

bogdanovich

Bogdanovich must have thought that that sounded pretty good because he made virtually the same remarks four decades later when AFI made the mistake of asking him what his favorite film is.

years after the event

get back acetate

Forty years ago this month the Fabs were recording what would become their last LP, Let It Be. The album was the result of 20 days of the band rehearsing for what turned out to be a 45-minute concert performed on the roof of the Apple building.

roof

I hope to do at least one major post on these rehearsal sessions seeing as how I spent this past summer listening to nearly one hundred hours of the rehearsal tapes on bootleg.

The story that surrounds this period of the Fabs career is that it was an unhappy time for them and these rehearsals were something of a disaster. The truth is a bit more complicated than that. I want to write a bit about what went on in the rehearsals because some of it is pretty strange and hilarious. In the mean time let’s look at what the critics said about the finished, such as it was, LP, Let It Be. When it was initially released on May 8, 1970, the reviews were mostly unkind. Under the headline “New LP Shows They Couldn’t Care Less,” NME reported, “If the new Beatles soundtrack is to be their last then it will stand as a cheapskate epitaph, a cardboard tombstone, a sad and tatty end to a musical fusion which wiped clean and drew again the face of pop”. Rolling Stone, in replying to Lennon’s “hope we passed the audition” line, said: “Musically, boys, you passed the audition. In terms of having the judgment to avoid either over-producing yourselves or casting the fate of your get-back statement to the most notorious of all over-producers, you didn’t…”

Time of course has been kind to the album and how little the Spector production, especially on The Long and Winding Road, added doesn’t matter much when there were moments like this when the band was absolutely on fire.

Nearly thirty years after the LP was released the only rock critic who matters was asked by a music magazine to show off his favorite albums. Apparently forgetting that he usually cites his favorite Fabs LP as Pepper, Brian Wilson presented Let It Be.

wilson shows off his records

Wilson weighs in

If you are interested in these Get Back (Let It Be) rehearsals they can be painstakingly downloaded, 83 discs in all, each disc split into two downloads to avoid compression issues, by clicking the “fab sounds” link in my blog roll. If you’d like to only dip your toe in the water, listen to this two hour crash course that aired on NPR a number of years ago. It is pretty excellent but shys away from some of the more lurid aspects of the sessions while focusing on the music.

dig the critics

travis takes aim

travis

small review

driver-and-passenger

travis and betsy

dig the critics