- Kevin gets a few quotes in a new article from Time Magazine titled “Can This Man Save The Movies? (Again?)”. The piece discusses the advent of digital technology in filmmaking, pondering if it will one day completely replace film. Here’s Kev’s bits, though the entire article is quite good:
Smith wanted to use a digital camera for Clerks II, the sequel to his 1994 debut hit, but his director of photography didn’t feel comfortable with the process. “A lot of directors and directors of photography are resistant to put down what they’re familiar with,” Smith says. Besides the shock of the new, there’s the love of the old. “Most people in film have a great affection for film stock, for the medium. And they feel that moving in a digital direction is kind of leaving their history behind. It’s more sentimental than anything else.”
…
Finally, film degenerates, the way a vinyl record does under a stylus or a videocassette does with frequent use. “With film you have degradation problems,” Smith says, “where the stock starts breaking down. Frames get lost when they cut reels together.” The digital look will stay fresh for the life of the theatrical run.
…
Some blame the shrinking theater audience on the narrowing gap between a movie’s premiere in theaters and its debut in video stores–from six months a few years ago to about four months or less today. “With the window getting smaller and smaller,” says Smith, “people don’t want to leave the house. The audience is being trained that they don’t have to run out to the theater to see something.” For many viewers, especially adults, the kids who see the big blockbusters and the critics who review the little indie films have essentially become focus groups that help them decide whether they should see a movie–when it comes out on DVD.
The genius of late 20th century entrepreneurism was to get people to pay a lot for things they were used to getting cheap (coffee) or free (water). A quarter-century ago, Hollywood made most of its money from showing films in theaters. Now the biggest bucks come from DVDs and pay TV. Producers also got something for nothing by packaging recent and old TV shows for the DVD market. All those revenue streams give folks more reasons to stay home, encased in their all-media cocoons, in some cases chained to the desktop deity that can never get enough attention. Just as the computer helps them do many things that used to take them out–work, shopping, buying books, renting movies–so will it soon allow them to download movies to watch on it. As Smith notes, “It’s tough to cram three or four people in front of a computer to watch something. But no doubt Steve Jobs is working on this.”
…
Whatever is lost on the smaller screen, DVD has become, in Smith’s words, “historically the final record of your movie. That’s the one people watch over and over.” Rodriguez has said that the “real versions” of his movies are the extended, unrated ones on DVD.
- Don’t forget, UK’ers — The absolutely brilliant, ahead of its time Clerks Animated Series begins airing IN ORDER on ITV4 TOMORROW (Wednesday) night at 10:30 PM. Catch it on air and urge all your pals to do so as well.
- Ascribe reports that Jason Lee is up for a Prism Award, for “Best Performance in a Comedy Series”. The Prism Awards honor outstanding accomplishments in the accurate depiction of drug, alcohol and tobacco use and addiction in film, television, interactive, comic books, music, and video entertainment.
- And hey, while we’re talking about Lee, how about a nice new photo of Jason with his wife Beth Riesgraf from this year’s Independent Spirit Awards?


Got Something To Say?
You must be logged in to post a comment.