-Emily Brent
To spoil, or not to spoil? Although the idea of "Spoiling" itself certainly has deeper roots, we mostly associate the term with the increasing number of online critics of film and television that has been growing since the birth of the medium. Of course, the idea of Film Criticism in the Age of the Internet is alternately derided as the death of standards in criticism, and praised as the democratizing of the true critical voice. The term "Spoiler," popularized as a term of "Netiquette," has now been satirized, challenged, and reconstituted, and is, in one sense, essential to the discussion about the value of criticism, whether online or off. As mentioned recently on ECSTATIC, sometimes a film is so bad it almost deserves to be spoiled (as with James McTeigue's The Raven), or more accurately, the surprise is so banal that it hardly even matters. And for those rare films that truly do have a twist worth preserving, it is often the case that the surprise is accompanied by a great film. Rene Clair's And Then There Were None, an adaptation of Agatha Christie's iconic murder mystery Ten Little Indians, is a film whose resolution is worth preserving, though not nearly the most interesting aspect of the film. In this case, getting there is way more fun than the actual arrival.
And Then There Were None |
It was his sled.
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Charlie Chaplin as Adenoid Hynkle in The Great Dictator |
Judith Anderson as Emily Brent in And Then There Were None |
June Duprez and Louis Hayward in And Then There Were None |
Rene Clair |
And Then There Were None |
Saw III (2003) |
The Passion of the Christ (2004) |
Scream (1996) |
Richard Jenkins - Cabin in the Woods |
Kristen Connolly and Jesse Williams - Cabin in the Woods |
The Coen Brothers - Blood Simple (1984) |
Whedon and Goddard - Cabin in the Woods |
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