5001 Nights at the Movies, by Pauline Kael
For Keeps, by Pauline Kael
Review by Jeffrey M. Anderson
Buy 5001 Nights at the Movies, by Pauline Kael
Buy For Keeps, by Pauline Kael
Of the half-dozen top American movie critics of the twentieth century,
Kael remains arguably the most influential. She was fearless, singsongy,
friendly, cutthroat, opinionated, and charming, but above all, she loved
movies. Her reviews were never dry, and she put herself in the place of
the common man, never talking down to readers. We identified with her.
She had a preoccupation with Bernardo Bertolucci and Brian De Palma, but
she was not above picking apart a beloved classic. Her positive reviews
of Nashville and Last Tango in Paris are still famous and
are re-read and studied. Her favorite movies are still Griffith's
Intolerance and the W.C. Fields movie Million Dollar Legs.
She wrote about film for thirty years, and nearly every single piece has
been published in book form. All of her books are worth reading, but for
budgetary concerns, these are the two that are essential. For
Keeps is a collection of the best full-length reviews from her entire
career. It's a good cross-section of her work, and it includes her
famous scathing essay Raising Kane, in which she argues that Orson
Welles was not the auteur of Citizen Kane. 5001 Nights
is a book of capsule reviews of thousands of movies from the beginning
of the century to her retirement in 1990. It's better for a quick
reference.
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