Healthy Or Rotten Tomatoes?
Kourtney Kardashian, Khloe Kardashian, Candice Swanepoel, Chloe Moretz, Isabelle Cutrim, Ellie Gonsalves
The Danger Of Film Critics Speaking As One
As the influence of Rotten Tomatoes grows, so does the new relevance of film critics. But only if they agree with each other.
Hereâs the downside. The âinfluenceâ only works if the Rotten Tomatoes number is high (or low) enough. It only works if âthe criticsâ are truly speaking as one. And so the built-in dynamic of Rotten Tomatoes is to encourage critics to agree with one another so that their voices can all add up to a single powerful voice thatâs greater than the sum of its parts.
What happens if youâre a critic who breaks ranks?
The sting of the pressure to conform is omnipresent. A few months ago, during the Tribeca Film Festival, I attended the premiere of âThe Circle,â a sci-fi parable of social media and lost privacy that seized my attention, rarely let it go, and had some ominous insights into the metaphysics of digital communion. (Emma Watsonâs performance: deft, layered, wide awake.) Later that night I posted my enthusiastic review, which I stand by, but the next morning I looked on-line and felt like the entire world had pressed a red buzzer that said âWRONG!â (The movieâs RT score now stands at 17% Fresh.) Iâm not saying that Iâm right and theyâre not, but what I am saying is that âThe Circleâ was too smartly crafted and provocative a drama to deserve such a unanimous dismissal. It felt like a response one wasnât allowed to go against.
The issue isnât just knee-jerk condemnation; itâs also knee-jerk adulation. This summer, I kept thinking: Where were the dissenting voices on âWar for the Planet of the Apesâ (RT score: 93% Fresh) or âSpider-Man: Homecomingâ (RT score: 92% Fresh) or âBaby Driverâ (RT score: 94% Fresh), a rock-ânâ-roll-on-wheels action spree that I, for one, thought played like a paint-by-numbers fanboy Tarantino pastiche? Maybe Iâm the only one in the world who felt that way, but I experienced the lack of diversity of opinion on all these films as a violation, rather than a fulfillment, of what film criticism should be. Were all these movies good enough to deserve a collective hosanna?
Remember when film critics were obsolete? When weâd lost our swagger, our sway, our influence? When it seemed like the entire world had gone critic-proof, because we just didnât matter anymore? Itâs hard to pinpoint when, exactly, film critics attained Peak Irrelevance, but itâs starting to seem like an eon ago, because this summer a chorus of people â moviegoers, film-industry executives, critics themselves â have been singing a very different tune. Itâs called: Weâre back! Critics, in case you hadnât heard, have emerged from the dark cave of our obsolescence and are once again bringing the news, keeping the studios in check, making the world safe for bad movies to die the grisly box-office death they deserve. Look out, âEmoji Movieâ! Weâre coming at you with a pitchfork.
Ellie GonsalvesÂ
As someone with a vested interest in thinking that critics matter, Iâd argue that our influence never totally went away. There was certainly a perception that it did, a feeling that went hand in hand with the notion that we were elitist art-head snobs who stood on the other side of a divide from the mainstream audience. Film critics have been called out for elitism ever since there were movies, but in an age when mega-budget franchise filmmaking had become a literal universe, one that dwarfs everything around it (including critics), that hostility reached a new pitch of jaded dismissal.
This summer, though, a trend thatâs been building for a while zoomed into view. Audiences, it seemed, were starting to turn their backs, and with far more flippant speed, on junky would-be blockbusters that didnât cut it as entertainment. And critics arguably became part of that equation. A low score on Rottentomatoes.com, the web site that aggregates reviews, dividing them into âFreshâ or âRottenâ and crunching those judgments into a metric, could seriously hurt a movie. It might even be the stake through the heart of a lousy âPiratesâ or âAlienâ sequel or a film like âThe Dark Tower,â which adapted Stephen Kingâs epic series of multiverse novels by making the brilliant decision to toss out the novels. Critics did the same thing to the movie â they took it out to the trash. And audiences heeded the call.
Itâs part of a criticâs job to steer people away from bad movies, but itâs even more vital that we shine a light on good ones, and this summer the influence of critics in that direction has also been noted. Thereâs been one major crossover indie hit, the romantic comedy âThe Big Sick,â a movie that critics championed. And before âWonder Womanâ opened, critics got behind it and helped to herald and define the qualities that audiences would wind up embracing about it.
In many cases, the word got out on Rotten Tomatoes. And though the influence of Rotten Tomatoes may, in fact, be no greater than the influence enjoyed by critics before Rotten Tomatoes came along, the fact that that influence is now about a score, a rating, a number lends it a unique weight. In an age of marketing surveys and corporate quantification, âThe critics liked itâ doesnât seem to be as powerful a statement as âIt got a 94% Fresh rating.â Critics, who are only human, like to believe that they carry a hint of power, a vestige of influence in this fragmented world. Rotten Tomatoes attaches a concrete number to their clout.
The other Kardashian…
Khloe Kardashian
Yet the preeminence of Rotten Tomatoes â which is to say, the siteâs all but official status as the place that testifies to the continuing influence of film critics â comes, I would argue, with a downside. And I donât just mean the obvious one thatâs been cited for years: that it encourages people to look at a rating and not bother reading a review. No, Iâm referring to the fact that it isnât just moviegoers who are listening to Rotten Tomatoes. Itâs critics themselves. And doing so has become, for them, a Faustian bargain.
It works like this. Critics, despite the image some may have of us, are not monsters of haughtiness. We care about movies, and we have a natural hope that when we review one, we arenât just talking to ourselves. So if we beat up on a movie and news of it gets out there on Rotten Tomatoes, or if we champion a film and help to usher it into the marketplace, a process facilitated by Rotten Tomatoes, what could be the downside of that?
Hereâs the downside. The âinfluenceâ only works if the Rotten Tomatoes number is high (or low) enough. It only works if âthe criticsâ are truly speaking as one. And so the built-in dynamic of Rotten Tomatoes is to encourage critics to agree with one another so that their voices can all add up to a single powerful voice thatâs greater than the sum of its parts.
What happens if youâre a critic who breaks ranks? The very fact that I would put it that way is an indication of what happens. In the world of film criticism, if youâre out of step with the majority, then youâre now in the position of not helping the cause â the cause, in this case, being visibility and influence. And your off-kilter opinion is going to be spotlighted â almost put on trial â by Rotten Tomatoes. That situation has put a subtle pressure on critics, though the pressure is really one that critics put on themselves.
Itâs a phenomenon that Iâve witnessed, anecdotally, over and over again. The critic I boarded a shuttle bus with at Sundance, right after a major movie let out, who chatted with me for about 20 seconds before he turned to his phone with the fever of someone in a war zone, nearly antic in his desire to see what other people were saying, and within minutes he had snorted up their opinions like lines of cocaine, ingesting the collective wisdom of the Twitterverse. Or, conversely, a critic friend of mine who only last week wrote one of the rare negative reviews of Steven Soderberghâs âLogan Lucky,â and she was attacked and harassed and ridiculed for it, as if she had struck some note of blasphemy, with the number of critics who liked the movie on Rotten Tomatoes (RT score: 93% Fresh) brandished as a weapon against her.
The sting of the pressure to conform is omnipresent. A few months ago, during the Tribeca Film Festival, I attended the premiere of âThe Circle,â a sci-fi parable of social media and lost privacy that seized my attention, rarely let it go, and had some ominous insights into the metaphysics of digital communion. (Emma Watsonâs performance: deft, layered, wide awake.) Later that night I posted my enthusiastic review, which I stand by, but the next morning I looked on-line and felt like the entire world had pressed a red buzzer that said âWRONG!â (The movieâs RT score now stands at 17% Fresh.) Iâm not saying that Iâm right and theyâre not, but what I am saying is that âThe Circleâ was too smartly crafted and provocative a drama to deserve such a unanimous dismissal. It felt like a response one wasnât allowed to go against.
The issue isnât just knee-jerk condemnation; itâs also knee-jerk adulation. This summer, I kept thinking: Where were the dissenting voices on âWar for the Planet of the Apesâ (RT score: 93% Fresh) or âSpider-Man: Homecomingâ (RT score: 92% Fresh) or âBaby Driverâ (RT score: 94% Fresh), a rock-ânâ-roll-on-wheels action spree that I, for one, thought played like a paint-by-numbers fanboy Tarantino pastiche? Maybe Iâm the only one in the world who felt that way, but I experienced the lack of diversity of opinion on all these films as a violation, rather than a fulfillment, of what film criticism should be. Were all these movies good enough to deserve a collective hosanna? In each case, though, the critics made their voices â or maybe we should just say their voice â heard.
Letâs be clear: This is not a conspiracy â by Rotten Tomatoes or anyone else. Itâs a subtle and insidious tendency made tangible by the ritualized collating of reviews. Yet critics are the last people on earth who should want to be conformists, and the rise of Rotten Tomatoes, not simply as a cult destination but as a cultural institution, now encourages them, on a weekly basis, to do so. Fresh and Rotten have become the new thumbs, and if thatâs the digit youâre going to be using, it doesnât allow for much wiggle room.
Their friends…
Candice SwanepoelÂ
Chloe Moretz
Isabelle Cutrim