Film Comment

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Film Comment
ISSN
0015-119X

Film Comment is the official publication of

avant-garde filmmaking from around the world.[1] Founded in 1962 and originally released as a quarterly, Film Comment began publishing on a bi-monthly basis with the Nov/Dec issue of 1972. The magazine's editorial team also hosts the annual Film Comment Selects at the Film at Lincoln Center. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, publication of the magazine was suspended in May 2020, and its website was updated on March 10, 2021, with news of the relaunch of the Film Comment podcast and a weekly newsletter.[2]

History

Origins

Film Comment was founded during the boom years of the international art-house circuit and the so-called

prose. You can help by converting this section, if appropriate. Editing help
is available. (November 2017)

Gordon Hitchens, 1962–1970

Richard Corliss, 1970–1982

Harlan Jacobson, 1982–1990

  • The magazine continued to arrange every issue around a midsection that tackled multifaceted issues of film aesthetics, historiography, and various phenomena in film culture. It also maintained a strong commitment to exploring classical Hollywood, even as it broadened the international scope of its criticism with features on
    Iranian
    and "Far Eastern" cinema.
  • The magazine began to chronicle the technological changes that were shaping film spectatorship. It grappled with "The Video Revolution" in the early 1980s in a midsection devoted to the subject (May/June 1982). J. Hoberman wrote: "If Television gave every American home its own personal rep house, the VCR has the potential to equip every viewer with the equivalent of a Movieola or Steenbeck. The appreciation thus engendered for fragmented (or fetishized) bits of 'Film' will likely have as profound an effect on the film culture of the Eighties as TV had on that of the Fifties and Sixties."[citation needed] This phenomenon was further explored in David Chute's article "Zapper Power" (April 1984).
  • Music videos emerged as a point of interest.[citation needed]
  • In the February 1984 issue, Film Comment's midsection chronicled its own history from its beginnings as Vision to the financial and editorial challenges that lay before it in the ’80s. "Whatever its level of profitability… Film Comment for the first time in its existence has finally been provided with a steady source of financing and a rock-solid publishing foundation. With Corliss as its editor, the society as its publisher, and a handful of quality writers as its key contributors, Film Comment now seems assured of continued survival and success."[citation needed]
  • The midsection in April 1986 commented on the emergence of
    AIDS
    .

Richard Jameson, 1990–2000

Gavin Smith, 2000–2015

  • Renewed emphasis on contemporary relevance.
  • Punchier visual design.[citation needed]
  • Standardization of editorial format, and the addition of several departments:[citation needed]
    • Annual Reader's Poll (Jan/Feb 01);
    • Sound and Vision (Sep/Oct 01);
    • Site Specifics (May/Jun '07)
    • Encore (Originally, "Return Engagement" May/June 6);
  • Regular columns assigned to Alex Cox ("Flashback" then later "10,000 Ways to Die", May/June '06), Guy Maddin ("Guy Maddin's Jolly Corner"), Paul Arthur ("Art of the Real", May/June '06), and Olaf Möller ("Olaf's World");
  • One of the lengthiest and most controversial[citation needed] articles Film Comment has printed appeared in September/October 2006. "Canon Fodder", by Paul Schrader, asserted the value of and laid the parameters for a film canon, and criticized what it deemed "Nonjudgmentals", who had devised schemes by which art could be closely studied and analyzed without prejudice—the prejudice, that is, of having to determine if the art work is good or bad vis-à-vis another work of art..."
  • In 2004, New York Times film critic A. O. Scott described the magazine as, "a stronghold of feisty, intelligent opinion that pushes no particular party line. Its tone of plain-spoken braininess—sophistication without snobbery, erudition with a minimum of jargon—reflects the vitality and variety of international film culture today."[4]
  • In 2007, the magazine was awarded the Utne Independent Press Award for Best Arts Coverage.[5]

Nicolas Rapold, 2016–2020

Source:[6]

  • Complete print redesign with expanded editorial, new departments and features, cultivation of new critics, focus on the art and craft of film, and high-profile recognition of filmmakers.
  • Established The Film Comment Podcast as a regular weekly feature, including special serial editions from Cannes, Sundance, and other festivals, and filmmaker interviews.
  • Expansion of web editorial into daily publication, with regular news roundups, new columnists, authoritative festival critiques, and in-depth interviews
    • Regular columns dedicated to personal and topical perspectives (Queer & Now & Then and Feeling Seen), genre, nonfiction, classic Hollywood, and intersections between film and other arts (Present Tense).
  • Established The Film Comment Talks, regular events accompanying editorial coverage through onstage conversations with filmmakers and critics, including annual Best Films of the Year discussion and countdown.
  • Magazine honored with a Film Heritage Award by the National Society of Film Critics
  • Emphasis as magazine of ideas engaged with the art and craft of filmmaking and with film history, and grounded in original writing and depth of knowledge.

Notable contributors

Critics

Others

See also

References

  1. ^ A. O. Scott (February 20, 2009). "Recovering Treasures From Below the Radar". The New York Times.
  2. ^ "Film Comment Relaunch Announcement". Film Comment. The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Retrieved March 1, 2021.
  3. ^ Joseph Blanco in Vision: A Journal of Film Comment (1:1, Spring 1962): page 2.
  4. ^ A. O. Scott (February 12, 2004). "Critics notebook". The New York Times.
  5. ^ Winners of the 2007 Utne Independent Press Awards
  6. ^ "Author Spotlight: Nicolas Rapold". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved March 1, 2021.

External links