Barbenheimer Whiplash

Now that Barbie has sold more than ONE BILLION dollars of tickets at the box office worldwide and our beloved Greta Gerwig has become the #1 commercial female director in movie history, it’s time for the complaints.

We’ve been waiting!

Oh, but wait.

Now that Oppenheimer has sold more than $600 million dollars of tickets at the box office worldwide and proven there is no ceiling to how popular, acclaimed and profitable THREE HOURS of dark, dramatic filmmaking can be, it’s time to eviscerate Christopher Nolan and IT into the cinematic equivalent of swiss cheese.

Boo hoo, right?

Bring. It. On.

I know.

Nevertheless, this is why we can’t have nice things.

As life goes on you get to the point where you not only realize you can’t please everyone, but that you really don’t give a sh-t and stop trying.

In reality, the only person you can actually please is yourself. 

And even that is unlikely.

Harumphhhh.

Especially when you are doing something artistic.

Actually, the arts are no different than life in that regard so let’s amend that thought to include everything.  When you try to be (or do or create) all things to all people you wind up with not much of anything worth spending time with.

I tell writing students that it doesn’t matter if a subject they write about has been done before because:

a. Everything (and everyone) has been done before, and

b. If you dig deep and tell the story in a personal (Note: But necessarily autobiographical) enough way, it can’t help but be original because no one has exactly your take on the world (Note: Clones, accepted).

Awww shucks

It only took me decades of therapy to get to this point but here I am preaching what the most truly evolved of us knew far earlier in life. 

Still, better late than never.

I was a movie critic at Variety for many years, many decades ago, and the most astute remark I ever heard about critics came from my colleague Jim Harwood, a really smart guy who sat at a desk to the left of me and used to write for the Wall Street Journal before covering show business and writing short clever columns about people like Ted Turner and Kirk Kerkorian long before that was popular.

When someone asked him once what qualified him to be a critic, he turned tartly to them and without missing a beat, said:

Because I have an opinion and a place to print it.

I said, what I said

Now, of course, EVERYONE does.

Including me.

God (Note: Or whoever you imagine Her to be) help us all.

See, what Harwood, as we all called him, got before any of us and is worth reminding all of us of at this moment, is that critical thought is nice but it’s not an absolute and there isn’t a right or wrong.

There’s simply an opinion.      

Exactly

There are a lot of boys (Note: Well, adult males acting like little boys) up in arms about what they perceive as the small-mindedness in which they are ALL being portrayed in a film about a doll. 

Just as there are lots of conservatives foaming at the mouth that a short sequence where little girls toss aside their Betsy Wetsy-like infant dolls in favor of a hip, curvaceous, fashion -forward plastic version of young women, means motherhood is in peril and the very future of society as we know it is being put at risk.

Oh.  My. Goddess.

eyeroll of the century

The complaints about what was going on in the mind of the genius man who supervised the invention of the first nuclear bomb and enabled it’s launching is a bit more complicated but nevertheless operates on the same principle.

Choosing to show a genius of the 1930s, 40s and 50s working in a boy’s club of mostly men (Note: Despite the fact that far less than 5% of the scientists working with him at Los Alamos were women) must mean that the filmmaker, not the math genius, ignores (nee marginalizes) women.   And the idea that the two primary sexual partners shown in his life were a female biologist and a female psychiatrist is further proof that the guy who made this movie can only see women as his own personal sexual receptacles. 

um… hmmm… uh… well…

Worse yet, is the clear racism employed by not showing re-recreated or existing documentary footage of the actual atomic bomb going off at Hiroshima and Nagasaki and getting to literally view the faces of tens of thousands of Japanese people being ripped away. 

That couldn’t be an artistic choice to center the film on the man’s existential crisis of good vs. evil and not the literal enormity of the bomb.  It can only be the means by which one gets to negate every achievement that came before it and dismiss the film, in its entirety, as a relic of storytelling of the white male privilege kind.

Well, I mean, Chris Nolan IS a white guy who is a bit of a genius just as Greta Gerwig IS a feminist with a passion for the color pink and cheeky comic irony.

What else could, or SHOULD, their movies be???

help!!

Oh, OF COURSE I get the complaints and where they’re coming from.

I’m not a TOTAL moron.  (Note: Even though it might be easier to dismiss me as such.)

But to accuse the films as either a whitewashing of history or a too woke view of men and/or women-hood is truly a bit reductive.

I was tempted to use the word self-serving but that would be a putdown to anyone else’s viewpoint, which I don’t seek to do (Note: No matter how tempting).   It’s merely to suggest that no one work or person or place can be 100% inclusive of everything and/or everyone.

Sorry?

And even if they could, guaranteed a bunch of the rest of us wouldn’t like the result of that either.

So instead, here’s a thought: 

If you don’t like what’s out there – do your own film.  Or, get a group of friends together who think like you do and have them do it. 

Or write it.  Or sing about it.  Or paint it.  Or rhyme it in couplets.

And then disregard anything I, or the world, has to say.  Especially if other people, but most importantly you, like it.

Billie Eilish – “What Was I Made For?” (from Barbie)

The Barbenheimer Report

How did it feel to give into the zeitgeist and make this a Barbenheimer weekend?

It. Felt. Great.

That is because in great part it reminded me of how I spent my 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s and beyond – indulging in the group anticipation and excitement of seeing movies, at a movie theatre, with a whole lot of other people, the very first weekend they opened.

If Barbie and Oppenheimer initially felt like a strange cinema pairing in that regard, well, they were. 

And yet… it works

What does a cotton candy-world take on women, all bathed in day glow pink and bursting with MTV video song stylings, have in common with a dense, three-hour science for dummies biopic over multiple timelines about the man who spearheaded the invention and building of the first atomic bomb that officially ended WWII?

Well, mega box-office success, for one thing.

Together both films grossed more than HALF A BILLION DOLLARS (Note: $511 million, to be exact) this weekend at the box-office worldwide. 

Not your traditional box office bomb

And included in that number is $235.5 million domestically, which in itself is a record.

It’s hard to explain just how good those numbers are, especially in a post-pandemic, or, well, any world.

But consider this:

Never before have TWO Hollywood films EVER opened in the US and Canada to such huge numbers in the SAME weekend.  Meaning Barbie took in $155 million and Oppenheimer posted $80.5 million in just a handful of days in North America.

And the summer is not even half over.

So much for phrases like top tier theatrical films are not worth the risk and there is just not enough room for everyone.

And all kinds of other words passed off as common wisdom these days.

Oh, hi AMPTP. 

A quick reminder that Barbie supports the WGA and SAG AFTRA

Just look out your window any day this week and you’ll see us writers and actors still on the picket line trying to get your attention for a fair deal so the rest of us can make you even more money.

That is, if you’re interested in doing it this way anymore.

It took the talents of two A list artistic type writer-directors, Greta Gerwig and Christopher Nolan, to steer the ship on two projects that on paper didn’t scream instant hit. 

Because let’s face it – Universal first made a deal with Mattel for the rights to make a movie about Barbie in 2009 and the non-fiction book chronicling the life of Robert J. Oppenheimer came out in 2004. 

Yeah, Ms. Gerwig and Mr. Nolan have each had hit films but they are also considered to be filmmakers who lead with integrity and artistic vision, qualities that are barely tolerated by the bottom line corporate overlords running most of the platforms out there these days.

Why grant them carte blanche on such tricky projects when we could just do another… sequel… or reboot…. or prequel…. or….. anything but something this risky?

Trust in Barbenheimer

The irony is that both writer-directors cut their teeth in the independent film world, he as a gritty 8mm filmmaker and she originally as a left of center young actress – the kind of backgrounds A.I. aspiring ceo’s are doing their best to eliminate from their preferred class of future creators if they had their way.

Which is not to say that this strategy will work out the way they intend, if this weekend is any indication.

I had two diametrically different moviegoing experiences at theatres showing both films this weekend and each audience seemed anywhere from happy to thrilled to blown away with what they were viewing.

Yes… yes it was

On Saturday night I was a guest at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ 1000 plus seat Samuel Goldwyn Theatre for a screening of Oppenheimer.  Anticipating a crowd, we arrived almost an hour early only to be met with several lines that snaked around the block in order to get in.

That is unusual for many reasons.

But mostly because the famous and not so famous Academy members and their guests were so excited they actually got there that early and queued up to ensure they and at least one friend would be guaranteed a seat.

Once the 70 mm print was announced inside to applause there was then three hours of rapt attention to the screen, the sound, the images, the actors and what I can only categorize (Note: No spoilers here) as a master filmmaker at his best.

Utterly entranced

By the time the movie was done and we were released back into the real world it was clear an audience of industryites agreed, some by enthusiastic applause and others by stunned silence, over just how thoroughly they had been transported.

Yet the next evening, at a long-standing public movie theatre in Westwood that seldom sells out but did so this night, I watched the cultural phenomenon known as Barbie.

Teenage girls with their friends, straight boy college guys with their friends, moms and dads with grade school kids hugging blankets in tow, mothers and daughters in matching pink daisy hair clips; a thirty-something woman with her grandmother, and many many couples – hetero, gay, non-binary and yes, even platonic.  White, black, brown and many other colors.

Barbie fans turned it out

In the movie business they used to call this a four-quadrant audience.

Nowadays, in big blue cities, we simply refer to it as life.

Interestingly, while what’s onscreen narratively in the Barbie movie is an exaggerated view of life, the ages, races and ethnicities of its characters were pretty reflective of the wide swath of real live people watching its story unfold in that theatre in Westwood.

Like Christopher Nolan, Greta Gerwig knows how to wow her audience and engage her audience.  Their strategies may be totally different but the results are in the numbers and the inevitable awards attention both films will receive.

Far be it for any of us to put a value on either other than to conclude that there is room for both them. 

And many more than that.

Ryan Gosling – “Just Ken”