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About Last Night

Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City

You are here: Home / 2004 / Archives for January 2004

Archives for January 2004

TT: Truth or consequences

January 20, 2004 by Terry Teachout

I do so love a nice ripe grassy-knoll theory.


Once Cinetrix catches a whiff of her smelling salts, she’ll be pleased to hear the latest DVD release info, courtesy of DVD Journal. Out today, as regular readers of this blog already know, is The Rules of the Game, the greatest movie ever made, on DVD at last. I’ll be writing about it as soon as my copy arrives.


In the nonce, here’s a snippet of news guaranteed to give Our Girl fits de joie:

Finally, the cult favorite TV series Freaks and Geeks is about to go digital, thanks to new DVD vendor Shout! Factory and DreamWorks Television. The six-disc set of the first (and only) season will include all 18 episodes, including three that never aired, and we are assured that some complicated music-licensing issues have been smoothed out (congrats to fans, by the way, who compiled nearly 40,000 online signatures to make this release a reality). Expect a “director’s cut” of the pilot episode, deleted scenes, outtakes, and — get this — 28 commentary tracks from practically everybody ever associated with the series. Geek out on April 6.

As it happens, I wrote about Freaks and Geeks for the New York Times a few years ago. Here’s the piece.


* * *


Old sitcoms never die–they just move to cable, where they surface at odd intervals forevermore. The nice thing about this two-tiered system of programming is that it occasionally allows those of us who don’t live on the cutting edge of popular culture to catch up with how the hipper half lives. So I paid attention when my friend Laura, a graduate student who specializes in Victorian literature but also keeps close tabs on the doings of people like P.J. Harvey and Conan O’Brian, called to tell me that the Fox Family Channel was rerunning two episodes of “Freaks and Geeks” back to back every Tuesday night at eight and nine, and that I absolutely had to tune in.


“Freaks and Geeks” is an hour-long comedy about life among the less popular students of a Michigan high school circa 1980. Created by Paul Feig and produced by Judd Apatow, it debuted on NBC in the fall of 1999. The critics loved it, the public ignored it, and the show was scuttled midway through its first season, with three episodes still waiting to be broadcast (they have since aired on Fox, and Feig and Apatow have gone on to create “Undeclared,” a new college comedy scheduled to debut on the main Fox network this fall). I never saw it, but Laura assured me that not only was it a great show, it was also eerily true to life. “That was exactly what it was like for me back then,” she said.


I tuned in, fell in love, told all my other friends how good it was, and promptly discovered that just about everyone I know who was going to high school in 1980 loved “Freaks and Geeks,” too, and that their lives had also been exactly like that. Fortunately, you don’t have to be under 40 to appreciate the show’s sharp-eyed social humor. Most of the character types will be perfectly recognizable to viewers who, like me, attended high school in the

OGIC: Regarding TMFTML

January 20, 2004 by Terry Teachout

Cinetrix has a theory. Evidence, too.

OGIC: Interim report

January 19, 2004 by Terry Teachout

Part two of my report on the making of the Sundance documentary Word Wars (read part one here) will be posted this evening. In the meantime, please enjoy these early reports from the movie’s press screening in Park City. Sounds like a hit to me!

TT: Almanac

January 19, 2004 by Terry Teachout

“‘Whenever things sound easy,’ Dortmunder said, ‘it turns out there’s one part you didn’t hear.'”


Donald E. Westlake, Drowned Hopes

TT: Ubiquity

January 19, 2004 by Terry Teachout

As I write these words, about 50 percent of our readers are in the eastern time zone of the United States. The rest are distributed across nine other time zones here and abroad. Hello out there!


I’m not sure how much we’ll be blogging in the course of the next 24 hours (Our Girl and I are both wrestling with prose-for-money deadlines), but I put up a lot of fresh stuff on Saturday and Sunday that you may not have seen, and I’ll also try to post something worth reading between now and the end of the day. In the meantime, thanks for your forbearance.

TT: You may fire when ready, Gridley

January 19, 2004 by Terry Teachout

I just emptied my e-mailbox, which contained (drumroll) 170 items. Quite a few, to be sure, were urgent requests to send money to Africans who can’t spell, ads for prescription drugs and penis enlargers (do these people know something I don’t?), and press releases from the Boston Symphony Orchestra (enough already, Bernadette!), but most were actual communications from actual readers, and all are now answered, save for a half-dozen or so that required somewhat more consideration and have been filed for later reply, by which I mean sooner rather than later.


Once again, thanks so much for writing to “About Last Night.” Your letters are a significant part of what makes blogging worthwhile. OGIC and I have the smartest readers imaginable, and we love hearing from you, even if it does occasionally take a month for us to reply.


So…if you’ve been holding back, let the e-mail recommence. I’m ready to rock again!

OGIC: Words on film, part two

January 19, 2004 by Terry Teachout

This continues Friday’s posting about the documentary film Word Wars, which trains a camera on competitive Scrabble at its highest levels. The movie premiered at Sundance Saturday. When the first installment ended, we were discussing the surprisingly wide reach of last year’s documentary on the National Spelling Bee, Spellbound, and how that success might affect the fortunes of Word Wars as filmmakers Eric Chaikin and Julian Petrillo seek distribution for their two-and-a-half-year labor of love.


“We heard about Spellbound when we had just finished shooting, in August 2002,” says Eric. “First I worried that it would steal our thunder, but soon I realized that the success of the movie could help Word Wars. The issue was whether we would be too close to it, but when I saw it I knew we weren’t. Spellbound is about kids. The exploding child syndrome is a very visually compelling act, with the children grimacing and disappearing and so forth.” Julian concurs: “Spellbound has a different structure, starting out as a character study and then zeroing in on competition. We wanted to see the characters interact with each other, and as a result our subject matter is more layered and dense, and harder to explain. But it was a fine thing that a word-oriented documentary blazed the trail and proved that it could be done successfully.”


One thing Spellbound had going for it was the wide variety of settings in its first movement, from a Texas cowtown to inner-city D.C (it’s no picnic not using “hardscrabble” here, but I’m exercising restraint). How bound was Word Wars to the small interior spaces where the game is played? “Intruding with the camera on so many high-strung personalities in such little spaces–hotel rooms and an apartment in Alphabet City, for example–was a particular challenge,” Eric concedes. But there are some Scrabble settings that might surprise you, too.


Washington Square Park is the home base for street Scrabble in New York City. “Gutsy, gritty Scrabble gets played everyday in Washington Square,” says Eric. “A b-story in the film is about a main character coming back to the Park. I was playing in the Park for a while, and that’s where I met some of the most interesting people who inspired me to make a movie. People are familiar with the chess players on the south side of the park, but a smaller, equally ragtag group plays Scrabble on the northwest side, with beaten-up, battered old dictionaries. They know their words as well as the tournament people.”


Julian adds, “The park was a vivid setting, visually and aurally, with a protest against the war going on in the background and scraggly codgers playing each other for a dollar a game, penny a point, in the foreground.” Two of the Park regulars, who don’t appear in the final cut, are “African-American intellectuals from the 1970s who look like they’ve been wandering around the streets of New York ever since.” One of them, friendly with everyone in the neighborhood, once studied comparative linguistics at MIT and knows 13 languages. He’s given to tossing off inscrutable pronouncements like “Cornel West took the wrong fork,” or “Cornel West is highly medicated” (hmm, pattern?). He has a reputation as the only notable defensive player–he has no offensive game, so his strategy is to jam up the board. He used to be a good player, Eric says, until he got into this defensive, paranoid mode. “That defines his stance toward the world,” says Julian, “not just Scrabble.”


I asked Eric and Julian about influences, and Errol Morris’s name came up early and often. “Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control takes its own path, leaving a lot up to the viewer,” Eric said. Julian chimed in, “Morris takes subjects that aren’t intrinsically visual, and finds visual interest in them.” Hoop Dreams and Best in Show were also mentioned. I raised my eyebrows at the latter, which is of course fiction, a mockumentary (n.b., since I first drafted this, Word Wars itself has been described by one lucky soul who has actually seen it as–coming full circle–a nonfictional mockumentary). “We’re not out to mock anyone,” Eric clarifies, “but we did count on everyone to have a healthy sense of humor about themselves. The obsessiveness with which these guys digest the dictionary is absurd. I spend my share of time looking through the dictionary too, and I try to channel it productively. But it’s absurd. There’s an absurd, funny, intense camaraderie that I wanted to capture.”


So will those of us not imminently jetting off to Utah get to see it? I didn’t know it Friday, but the answer seems to be yes. Word Wars distributor Seventh Art Releasing has struck a deal with the Discovery Times channel. As far as I know, there’s no air date yet; when there is, you’ll hear it here. Seventh Art, meanwhile, is also still looking for a general theatrical distributor. The film’s warm reception at Sundance won’t hurt. Eric had set this festival as a specific goal for the film, but he admits that the prizes there tend to go to issue-oriented documentaries (this year, though, much attention seems to have gone to a surfing film that became the first documentary to open the festival). “But people may be looking for the next slice-of-life film this year, the next Spellbound.” It doesn’t hurt their cause that Julian brought to the project his experience of having worked on three films that have won the Sundance Audience Award in the past.


Both Eric and Julian are optimistic about the prospects for more documentaries getting commercially released following a year that saw the mainstream success of not only Spellbound but also Capturing the Friedmans. They have a standard “documentary diatribe,” but there have been so many good signs lately that the version I hear is pretty watered down with optimism. “It’s still a hard market to break into, financially speaking. Michael Moore’s success is unique. This was starting to change when we were filming; every year it seems there’s another documentary that breaks into the ranks of general-release films. People’s perceptions are changing. Everyone says,

TT: Alas, not by me

January 18, 2004 by Terry Teachout

Says Laura Lippman, “About Last Night”‘s favorite living mystery writer:

No tour of Baltimore is complete without driving past something that used to be there.

For the context of this impeccably quotable remark (plus a nifty photo), go here.

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Terry Teachout

Terry Teachout, who writes this blog, is the drama critic of The Wall Street Journal and the critic-at-large of Commentary. In addition to his Wall Street Journal drama column and his monthly essays … [Read More...]

About

About “About Last Night”

This is a blog about the arts in New York City and the rest of America, written by Terry Teachout. Terry is a critic, biographer, playwright, director, librettist, recovering musician, and inveterate blogger. In addition to theater, he writes here and elsewhere about all of the other arts--books, … [Read More...]

About My Plays and Opera Libretti

Billy and Me, my second play, received its world premiere on December 8, 2017, at Palm Beach Dramaworks in West Palm Beach, Fla. Satchmo at the Waldorf, my first play, closed off Broadway at the Westside Theatre on June 29, 2014, after 18 previews and 136 performances. That production was directed … [Read More...]

About My Podcast

Peter Marks, Elisabeth Vincentelli, and I are the panelists on “Three on the Aisle,” a bimonthly podcast from New York about theater in America. … [Read More...]

About My Books

My latest book is Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington, published in 2013 by Gotham Books in the U.S. and the Robson Press in England and now available in paperback. I have also written biographies of Louis Armstrong, George Balanchine, and H.L. Mencken, as well as a volume of my collected essays called A … [Read More...]

The Long Goodbye

To read all three installments of "The Long Goodbye," a multi-part posting about the experience of watching a parent die, go here. … [Read More...]

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