Monday, July 20, 2009

Andrew Sarris: Lion of film critics

The New York Times just published a great profile on Andrew Sarris, the legendary 80-year-old film critic who was laid off by the New York Observer earlier this year. Sarris is known for importing the auteur theory of film criticism from France to the US. I've been reading his 1968 book The American Cinema off and on all summer, almost as bathroom reading (the longest chapter is about five pages). In it he asserts, among other questionable claims, that Kubrick was a charlatan and Wilder was a knee-jerk cynic.

If nothing else, Sarris provokes, and does it well. In old age, I've found him a little insuferable (here he is dismissing Children of Men like a curmudgeon on life support). Historically, Sarris is a fascinating figure. He's emblematic of a different era, when cinema was not yet considered an artform. It took Sarris and Pauline Kael's torrential bickering to elevate the medium in the eyes of many.

The Times article is a great read and a terrific gateway into '50s-'60s film criticism.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Jerry Schnoor on CGRER and sustainability

Dr. Jerry Schnoor argues for an interdisciplinary approach to sustainability, using the Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research (CGRER) as an example.



Video shot by Ben Hill of the University of Iowa Center for Media Production and edited by myself. Learn more about Schnoor's work here.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Jerry Schnoor on the dangers of continuing coal

Dr. Jerry Schnoor discusses why Iowa can't afford to build new coal-fired power plants.



Video shot by Ben Hill of the University of Iowa Center for Media Production and edited by myself. You can learn more about Schnoor here.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Dr. Jerry Schnoor on "sustainability tax"

Jerry Schnoor, my boss at the Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research (CGRER), argues for a sustainability tax to supplant the income tax.



Video was shot by Ben Hill of the University of Iowa Center for Media Production and edited by myself. You can read Schnoor's scroll-like resume here.