By David Poland poland@moviecitynews.com
Yes, The New Yorker
There are three absolute movie must-reads in the November 22 edition of The New Yorker.
Malcolm Gladwell’s piece about what constitutes plagiarism and just what is theft of intellectual content and what is not is one of the most important pieces I’ve read in a long time. Gladwell and the New Yorker were perhaps-victims of a perhaps-theft by the author of the Broadway play, Frozen. Yet, he manages to offer both his personal perspective and a journalistic one. Tremendous piece.
David Denby’s long piece on Almodovar gets Almodovar better and more completely than anything else I have read on the filmmaker. It was time for perspective on Almodovar’s career and Denby hits it out of the park.
And Anthony Lane, who generally pisses me off for having more interest in being clever than in discussing film, examines the story behind Finding Neverland. And much like Gladwell, he offers both an excellent piece of reporting as well as some personal perspective on J.M. Barrie’s history. He does take sides, but there is more than enough in the piece for you to decide how you feel for yourself.
It’s the issue with the Barbara Bush-looking woman in an elevator, staring up at “Floor 4, Men’s Dresses.” I think the cartoon edition has replaced this one on newsstands. But it would be worth the effort to track it down. Sorry I didn’t offer this up earlier…
UPDATE SUNDAY: Thanks to Marc Weisblott for pointing us to Greg.org’s New Yorker database with links to each of the stories above.
The three articles are linked here.
http://greg.org/archive/2004/11/15/20041122_this_week_in_the_new_yorker.html