That's not really a very good critique of criticism. Very similar things in slightly different situations can, and often are designed to, produce drastically different emotional responses.Dastardly said:That said, there's nothing wrong with occasionally critiquing the critics. For instance, if a critic expresses intense hatred for a particular element in a movie, while simultaneously expressing love for the same element in a different movie -- we can point out that this is inconsistent.
Now, it's possible that inconsistency results from some kind of bias (usually preconceived notions going into a film, or a taint on opinion due to the business behind the film), but what we'd really be pointing out is that the critic's own views appear internally inconsistent.
Something like that looks like a complaint, but really it's just a request for the critic to clarify his/her stance on the matter, so that his/her audience is no longer confused as to how to interpret this information.
Bad things to criticize a critic for:
1. Consistently hating a particular series, story/technical element, genre.
2. Expressing clear recommendations to buy/not buy certain movies/games/etc.
3. Having different feelings on two superficially similar movies/games/etc.
Good things to criticize a critic for:
1. Consistently reviewing the things he/she is known to hate, if he/she appears to be going out of the way to do so.
2. Presenting inconsistent value judgments (It's great when my favorite director does it, but it's shit when someone else does, etc.).
3. Having different feelings on two superficially similar movies/games/etc. without clarifying what makes them different to him/her.
A critic's job is communication. And while many complaints can be ignored, some are an indication that communication is not being received clearly. Asking (via complaint) a critic to clarify is good. Asking (via complaint) a critic to change his/her stated opinion is not.
Which is why I said the complaint isn't really just a complaint. It's a request to clarify. "Hey, you hated that in Movie X, but you loved it in Move Y -- what the hell?" That's the critic's cue to explain the difference.ZephrC said:That's not really a very good critique of criticism. Very similar things in slightly different situations can, and often are designed to, produce drastically different emotional responses.
No, they're not wrong. Because they were never claimed to be "right." They are good things to criticize, though. It's perfectly normal for a reviewer to seek things that elicit strong feelings... but it's also easy for a reviewer to line up punching bags to get free hype and drama.But those other two points are simply wrong. It's perfectly normal and valid for a reviewer to seek out art that they feel strongly about to review, and it's perfectly acceptable for them to react differently to something if they have a pretty good idea why it's being done in a certain way.
Okay that's... actually a much better explanation of what you were trying to say earlier. I get it now. Your first post came across kind of like you wanted critics to have feelings in a manner that you found consistent, but if what you really want is for them to explain themselves well that's just expecting them to do a good job, which is a good thing.Dastardly said:snip
But that's the whole point of a review. For example with the Avengers, if Bob had said it was terrible, you would have known it really, really was. Him saying it was great left a lot of wiggle room if you didn't feel the same way about the whole undertaking as him, but if you were still undecided about whether or not to see it you could find another reviewer with a different perspective on the whole thing. Knowing who likes what and why just makes that easier. You'll never find one single person that agrees with you on everything, so having a bunch of different opinionated people helps.Littaly said:I've never known how I feel about this. A completely objective (if such a thing exists) criticism of something would be terribly boring to read, but on the other hand, I do have some problem with critical bias.
It's not so much about one opinion being more right than the other as it is about when something is worth reading at all. If a review is heavily colored by a personal experience or view of the critic that I don't share in the slightest, is there really a point in me reading it? If a critic hates super hero movies for being superhero movies and lets his review be influenced by that, whereas I kind of dig superheroes, what am I gonna get out of the review? To me it's just going to be an expression for a viewpoint that I already know I don't share. I wouldn't mind hearing some arguments or discussion of why it is that said reviewer has something against superheroes, but that's an entirely different story.
It's probably one of the downsides with criticism from Internet celebrities. You find out so much about what their personal views and experiences are that it's much easier to be skeptical when their reviews fall in line with that. "How much of this praise for The Avengers comes from it being a really good movie and how much comes from the fact that MovieBob has been hyped for it for years and goes into it really wanting to love it? If I'm not nearly as hyped, isn't it better if I go watch another review instead?". It's probably why I often end up liking MovieBob more when he's reviewing non-geek stuff.
Like I said, I haven't thought this through nearly enough (and it seems the more I think about it the less clear it becomes), so there's a fair chance none of what I just said made any sense :-/
My thought on the matter are still not really made up, so I probably shouldn't post seeing how it will just end up as a wall of unsorted thoughts in text form. But since I so enjoy a civilized discussion, I'll post anyway ^^ZephrC said:But that's the whole point of a review. For example with the Avengers, if Bob had said it was terrible, you would have known it really, really was. Him saying it was great left a lot of wiggle room if you didn't feel the same way about the whole undertaking as him, but if you were still undecided about whether or not to see it you could find another reviewer with a different perspective on the whole thing. Knowing who likes what and why just makes that easier. You'll never find one single person that agrees with you on everything, so having a bunch of different opinionated people helps.Littaly said:-snip-
Or, to address the elephant in the room, with the most recent Spider-Man movie Bob here was pretty anti-hyped about the whole thing. He didn't think Sony got Spider-Man's character, he thought the whole movie was a stupid cynical cash grab, and he didn't expect them to put a lot of effort into it. He had a lot of expectations going it, and that gave the movie a high hurdle to overcome for him to like it, and it absolutely didn't overcome that. It was a deeply flawed movie that didn't understand Spider-Man from the comics at all. Now lots of people, myself included, didn't really care about all that and so enjoyed the movie. That doesn't make Bob wrong, and I think he was pretty clear about what he thought and why he thought it, so all the hate-backlash he's gotten for having an unpopular opinion has really taken me aback. He has a well informed and well explained opinion. I don't see why people get so weird about him disagreeing with them. It's just odd.
I'm actually saying both. A critic should put forth views that are internally consistent. And if something seems inconsistent, there are two possible explanations:ZephrC said:Okay that's... actually a much better explanation of what you were trying to say earlier. I get it now. Your first post came across kind of like you wanted critics to have feelings in a manner that you found consistent, but if what you really want is for them to explain themselves well that's just expecting them to do a good job, which is a good thing.
As Yahtzee proves, it's possible to be an entertaining critic and not just pick things you hate. The guy picks on games he likes, too. His whole deal is a humorous focus on the negative aspects of a game, even beloved ones. A critic that goes out of his/her way to review a game after having already made it clear they hate the series? It's just an excuse to release the same review again, most times.Also, I guess I feel I should point out that if a reviewer is really consistently going almost exclusively after things they despise to crack lots of jokes, they're probably trying to be an entertainer more than a reviewer and should probably be judged as such.
I guess the problem is that all a reviewer can ever really do is explain why they feel a certain way about something and hope that information turns out to be useful or entertaining or both. Certainly Bob's Spider-Man review was one of the least useful, but I think reviewers that get that involved in hype and then try to pretend they're objective about it afterwards are just being dishonest and unhelpful in an opaque way.Littaly said:My thought on the matter are still not really made up, so I probably shouldn't post seeing how it will just end up as a wall of unsorted thoughts in text form. But since I so enjoy a civilized discussion, I'll post anyway ^^ZephrC said:snip
It's not so much that I want to have a reviewer who is going to have opinions similar to mine, on the contrary, I think unchallenged opinions are bad for everyone involved. It just kind of looses a bit its worth for me if it's heavily colored by a certain view.
My problem with the whole Spider-Man review (which is a very convenient example ^^) wasn't so much that I disagreed with MovieBob on the matter (I kind of didn't). But when he's spent a year telling everyone how he hates the whole project for what it is and thinks it's doomed to fail, and then ends up posting not one but two reviews telling me precisely how right he was, it's hard to take it seriously. How much of that is of actually worth listening to and how much of it is just him affirming his standpoint? And (I guess more importantly) how much is it really worth listening to someone telling you that they thought what they were going to think all along? (<- non-rhetorical question)
It's really easy to get caught up in hype for something, both negative and positive. I know because I do it, often. There are things I've lifted to the skies as the best things ever leading up to, and right around the time of, their release that I've looked back on with a much clearer view later on and said "yeah, maybe I overdid it".
I guess what I'm saying is I want criticism, smart, insightful and well thought out thought on a piece of entertainment, not just another raving part of the hype-machine (be it positive or negative). Which Internet critics, even the good ones, even the ones that I follow regularly, sometimes have a tendency of becoming.
Also, on this: My personal disagreement with MovieBob came in two parts:ZephrC said:Or, to address the elephant in the room, with the most recent Spider-Man movie Bob here was pretty anti-hyped about the whole thing. He didn't think Sony got Spider-Man's character, he thought the whole movie was a stupid cynical cash grab, and he didn't expect them to put a lot of effort into it. He had a lot of expectations going it, and that gave the movie a high hurdle to overcome for him to like it, and it absolutely didn't overcome that. It was a deeply flawed movie that didn't understand Spider-Man from the comics at all. Now lots of people, myself included, didn't really care about all that and so enjoyed the movie. That doesn't make Bob wrong, and I think he was pretty clear about what he thought and why he thought it, so all the hate-backlash he's gotten for having an unpopular opinion has really taken me aback. He has a well informed and well explained opinion. I don't see why people get so weird about him disagreeing with them. It's just odd.
Dastardly said:I'm actually saying both. A critic should put forth views that are internally consistent. And if something seems inconsistent, there are two possible explanations:ZephrC said:snip
1. The critic is being inconsistent in his/her application of criticism -- as in forgiving a big mistake from a favorite artist, and then blasting another artist for the exact same mistake.
2. The critic's opinions differ because it really isn't the "exact same mistake," and that distinction relies on context the critic should have provided to the reader. When that context is considered, the critic's criteria once again appear internally consistent.
The same critic can be guilty of both of these. Sometimes it's one, and sometimes it's the other. In both cases, to the audience, it can seem like the critic is being inconsistent until clarification is offered (if any).
A recent example: Many critics railed against the new Amazing Spider-Man movie. While many of their complaints hold water, one baffles me: The complaint that the Lizard, as a villain, was far too similar to the Green Goblin from the Sam Raimi movie, and this makes him a bad villain (NOTE: Not talking about appearance complaints here). Is it true? Sure, in very general terms.
But most of these critics also hold Spider-Man 2 to be one of the best Spider-Man movies... while failing to mention that Raimi's Doc Ock is even more similar to Green Goblin (scientist with good intentions experiments on himself with unproven technology giving him superhuman powers and causing him to go mad and hear voices in his head eventually leading him to kidnap Spider-Man's aunt and love interest to induce a final showdown).
To hate the villain in one movie while praising the villain in the other seems internally inconsistent -- they're forgiving Raimi because he's a favorite, and hating Lizard because they perceive the whole enterprise as a Sony cash-grab. Now, could a critic offer an explanation for what makes it okay in one, but not in the other? Absolutely! But the idea here is that they should.
My response to both of these things is kind of the same.Dastardly said:Also, on this: My personal disagreement with MovieBob came in two parts:ZephrC said:snip
The first was actual civil disagreement about the characters in the movie. I felt they were actually more real than Raimi's movies. The bully had some depth, the nerd wasn't the "lie down and take it" kind of nerd, the girlfriend wasn't there to get kidnapped to "make Spider-Man pay," and Uncle Ben's death was even more tragic because of how trivial the exchange before it was. It was a reboot and update, not a retread of the same old "Gotta squeeze the origin story into one comic" original story. On that, just a difference of opinion.
But my second disagreement was the volume of the hate expressed. There were definitely flaws and mistakes. I hate the "parent conspiracy" storyline, too, and it wasn't handled very well. But the mistakes weren't as bad as MovieBob made them out to be. I mean, what made the "crane scene" in this cheesier than the "If you mess with one of us..." crap from the Raimi movie?
So you see the heart of the issue: Differences of opinion are one thing. That's not bias. But when we allow those differences of opinion to artificially amplify our good or bad thoughts about something? That's where bias comes in.
Think of it this way: My wife and my wife's idiot sister who I hate (Hypothetical here). My wife drops something on my foot. I scream and yelp, because it hurts, and I forgive her -- hey, mistakes happen, it's not like she did it on purpose. If her sister were the one to do it? Maybe I'd yell and swear at her and tell her she needs to be more careful, and really play up how much it hurts -- basically, the natural negative response would be amplified by my latent dislike of the girl.
Why? Because I already don't like her going into this. So it causes me to unfairly represent the actual harm as greater. Also, I know that I can mistreat her without much in the way of serious fallout (I don't have to live with her), so I feel okay cutting loose. All of this frustration? Nothing to do with my foot. But I'm making it about my foot as a convenient way to vent all my other frustrations.
On a more cheerful note, Yahtzee does an incredible balancing act between critic and entertainer, but, as you pointed out, he does pick on things he likes. He's more entertainer than critic, but it's usually pretty obvious when he's being relatively serious. The jokes can be judged as jokes, and the critiques can usually be judged as critiques without a lot of confusion.As Yahtzee proves, it's possible to be an entertaining critic and not just pick things you hate. The guy picks on games he likes, too. His whole deal is a humorous focus on the negative aspects of a game, even beloved ones. A critic that goes out of his/her way to review a game after having already made it clear they hate the series? It's just an excuse to release the same review again, most times.