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Cynema

 

It doesn’t quite work, because “Cynema” and “Cinema” are homonyms. Visually – okay. Aurally – needs to be “Cynical Cinema.”

Over the last year, I’d say I’ve seen about a dozen short video/film projects that have been conceived of and/or produced, directed, acted in by students or friends of mine, plus a few more via the “Check this out!” entreaty of a Facebook post or what-have-you. I’ve noticed in far too many of them a gravitational pull toward a glib, cynical tone – fully half of them are allied with the mockumentary style that reached its apogee first with Spinal Tap and then with Waiting for Guffman, and recently popularized on television by The Office, but depressingly absent a certain quality to be discussed below.

I think part of why the mockumentary is appealing to low-budget short film auteurs is that it offers relief from certain hoary technical considerations like “good lighting” and “camera moves” – the genre is defined by natural lighting, handheld camera, improvised lines, etc. But when you put poor lighting and jagged handheld camera moves on top of NO STORY and glib, improvised The Office-ish dry humor – this holds interest for about one minute  - if you’re really funny. My problem is that unless you’re going to be better and funnier than those two films or The Office, you shouldn’t attempt it. Those are professionally funny people, and in this business I think if you haven’t been paid to be funny, there’s an awfully good chance that if you tried, you simply aren’t funny enough to be paid for it. Ipso facto whatevero. And then there’s the common offshoot of this tired genre: The mockumentary about The Industry. One of the short films I watched was an industry insider mockumentary about a horrible actor who screws up audition after audition while thinking he’s Marlon Brando. Or the other one about, get this, The Awful Agent!  Ugh. If there’s anything worse than generalized cynical mockumentary tone, it’s that tone applied to the industry. It all just feels terrible irrelevant and clique-ish and narcisisstic. There’s a reason Unscripted didn’t make it past one season – and that was produced by George Clooney, who would seem to know a thing or two about creating successful work (the pilot was shot in one of our theatres, btw). And Extras as well – I think there are 12 episodes total. (Though among others, that one oft-Youtubeified scene with McKellan and Gervais is brilliance in this genre.)

But Holy Hypocrisy, Batman: I love Entourage. Huh? How is this possible? First off – it isn’t mockumentary style. It has a structured story line each season, it’s shot beautifully, and has at its heart a pulsating performance by Jeremy Piven as Ari. No Piven, no tickie, no laundry, no series. (Kevin Dillon’s hilarity runs a close second.) And I loved Spinal Tap and Waiting For Guffman. Huh? Why? Firstly, they are made by some professionally funny people. But I would offer that underlying successful mockumentaries and industry-insider comedies is the factor referred to in the title of this post: They aren’t Cynema.

cynical, adj., 1. concerned only with one’s own interests and typically disregarding accepted or appropriate standards, 2. distrustful of human sincerity or integrity

So a definition emerges: cynema, n., filmmaking motivated (too much) by cynical motives of what will move the creators’ careers forward, at the obvious expense of humanity or passion; cynema is often characterized by mockumentary style, poor craftsmanship, trying unsuccessfully to be funny (or just imitating others’ humor), hitting a visual punchline, trying to nail a tone without nailing a story.

To me, the reason Guffman, Spinal Tap, The Office, Entourage do well is because there is a palpable sense, quite simply, of  joie de vivre. There’s just a raw sense of fun underneath the really good ones. And most of the dozen or so shorts that I’ve seen that attempt the mockumentary style are bereft of joie de vivre. They’re cynical. There’s a nastiness underneath it, there’s a bitterness, and it resonates throughout like a stuck low note on a piano, its volume regenerated again and again because the hammer is not damped down. They’re trying too damned hard to be clever and to hit a tone. Why? Because they think that will be funny or will catch the attention of someone who will move the career forward. And when considerations of tone are overriding story, I think you’re heading down the chute to irrelevance. Without story, there tends to be an aimless non-energy, no forward movement, the pace lags, and thus the only thing you have left to elicit a response is friggin’ cleverness, and as result I feel pandered to. As the viewer, I start feeling ornery, as if I’m being commanded to laugh because…. Why? I don’t know. Because if I don’t, the poor specimen won’t make it onto www.funnyordie.com or some such thing…

But I must confess I think all this relentless glib cleverness and cynicism is undercutting the real potentials of the talent involved. The question I always have, similar to that of my “Shit Theatre” post….: What else could this person have spent the time creating? One of my most common rhetorical questions to actors is, “If someone gave you $1M to make the movie you want for you to star in, what would that story be? And who would you play?” It’s kind of scary how few people have the answers. But I would conjecture that only a small number would answer, “I would take the $1M and make umpteen cynical mockumentary short films, plus one narrative film about how bad my agent is.” I think we’d start to hear about a broader story arc, more in-depth character, more dramas would show up to balance out the comedy, the imagination would take flight, etc.

So the bottom line of all this rambling would be that whatever passion and thoughtfulness would fuel the feature film you’d make for $1M or more, have the same fuel all that you do. A strong story, believed in by all who are making it, told with humor and compassion and humanity, has far more potential to launch you than a cynical attempt to nail a tone or style that is popular.

 

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4 Responses to Cynema

  1. Let me start by prefacing this comment. Its going to sound like Im being … combative? bellicose? quarrelsome? (none of those are quite right, but somewhere in that general arena) … But Im not. I really am just trying to understand the bigger message behind your musings.

    In the last 4 months there have been 3 posts regarding the work that actors do that is, in your opinion, essentially a waste of time. Costaritis, shit theatre, and Cynema. When I read them individually as they came down the pike, I completely agreed with all of them, and even felt a sense of relief. “thank God I dont have to do THAT anymore!” but after this most recent one hit the airwaves, I started to think “Well what the hell are we supposed to do then? Not work at all until were able to do the work that we REALLY want to do?”
    I can probably answer my own question for you. “It boils down to who’s trying to tell a story, and whos just trying to be clever in order to further their career” which I agree with. But I guess my point is… or my question rather… is dont you have to do the shit theatre, the crappy co-stars, and particularly the cynema, which is in itself a still very new media that everyone is still trying to figure out… dont you have to do those things just in the interest of experience so that when you DO figure out what YOUR story is that you WANT to tell… when someone offers you your million and says “tell me a story” that you have the experience and the know how to do it?

  2. allenbarton says:

    I don’t find your question combative/bellicose/quarrelsome at all. I had the same consideration myself in writing them – that it was coming across too negative. But I guess I’m targeting my musings towards the highly creative, intelligent, talented people who I am fortunate enough to deal with on a daily basis. It’s when I feel that these professionals are undermining their own potential through their choices that it gets me riled up. Certainly at the start of any career, one is going to engage in projects that are subpar for the purpose of experience alone, and I have ZERO problem with that. Ditto for moving from “only” acting into a more comprehensive actor/writer/director kind of mode. But I’m seeing that people who are far beyond such “experience-building” fare are treating themselves as if they’re 5 years behind where they truly are in terms of ability, storytelling, etc. I’m trying to make clear that this is not about a snobbishness – everyone has their damned opinion about a piece of work, and I’m not saying mine is any more important, other than in perhaps a structured teaching setting. It’s about the integrity of each individual, the esteem, and always shooting for the very best, for the art that is in their dreams, rather than catering to an analysis of what the omnipotent “THEY” might want. Milton, from Acting Class: “I look at everyone not as they are, but rather in terms of what they’re capable of being. I don’t see before me some struggling, self-centered actor wrestling with his or her career or day-to-day problems. And I will only relate to you on that level, the level to which you should be striving to reach. I’m aiming towards and only interested in who you can be and what you can create as an artist.”

  3. Roddy Jessup says:

    Well we can now add to the list. Concert Pianist, Teacher, Executive Director, PJTV Talking head, father to a 2 year old, Dresden Drinking Buddy AND he responds to posts to his blog in under 20 minutes flat, complete with a quote from the Greek that puts all of his previous posts in perspective.

  4. Roddy Jessup says:

    wow… my capitalization in that last comment is all over the place. Too much cofee,

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