This is the seventh
post in my attempt to hierarchize media uses according to a utilitarian
rubric. My first six posts dealt with James Cameron’s Avatar,
Marcel Duchamp’s The Fountain,
Homer’s The Odyssey, Ludovico
Einaudi’s Primavera, the Idle No More
movement, and with producing media for a good cause such as the Against Malaria
Foundation. In this post, I examine the
effectiveness of Guy Maddin’s My Winnipeg.
This is a Canadian movie made in 2007 that I’ll use as a rough stand in for “art house and independent cinema.”
My Winnipeg is an experimental cross between
autobiography, tourist film, and dark comedy. It features Maddin’s traditional use
of retro black-and-white visuals, Soviet Montage-style editing, nightmarish
imagery, and Silent Era intertitles – but with a voiceover that makes My Winnipeg more accessible than any of
Maddin’s other films. The voiceover makes the film feel like a traditional documentary,
one in which a filmmaker reminisces about his experiences in his hometown. Of
course, many of the “facts” in this documentary aren’t true, some scenes are
recreated for dramatic effect, and the film is shot and edited in a style
unique to Maddin.
It’s often thought
that the increased sophistication of art house films makes them better than
mainstream entertainment. But when our criterion for “good” is based on
consequences, this may no longer be the case. Will this film, so different from
Avatar, receive different scores?
Strength of Impact:
- How many people does the project reach?
- How significantly does it impact the people it reaches?
- How likely are the people it impacts to spread this impact?
- How long lasting is its impact?
- How grave was the issue pre-impact?
My answers:
- Medium
- Low
- Low
- Low
- Low
Explanation:
In terms of SoI, My Winnipeg is just like Avatar except
it reaches less people. If anything, some of the “Lows” here, such as SoI-2,
would be won by Avatar if there existed a tiebreaker.
Although My Winnipeg is an intelligent, original, and funny
film, there’s no reason to assume that it changes people more than Hollywood
films do. If anything, it’s less likely to result in narrative transportation
and thus less likely to affect viewers. The degree to which intelligent,
original, and funny thoughts and experiences alter people is mostly guesswork,
but I suspect each viewer is affected in his or her own way. That isn’t a bad
thing, but it certainly doesn’t scream “optimal.”
According to my basis for valuing art, I can see no reason to expect My
Winnipeg to affect people more strongly than Avatar, or for longer,
or to make them more likely to pass anything relevant on to others.
Quality of Impact:
- How much does it increase the accuracy of people's models of reality?
- How much does it improve people's quality of life?
- How much more likely does it make people to act altruistically toward others?
My answers:
- 0
- +1
- 0
Explanation:
I again have no reason to score this
differently than Avatar. It doesn’t really hold any educational value –
and if it does, the knowledge in the film is countered by the fact that there
is much false information that is easy to be intertwined with fact – and it
certainly doesn’t make people more likely to act altruistically toward others.
It is, however, an enjoyable, thought-provoking, emotional experience, and for
that it scores a point to QoI-2.
If there is a
mistake anywhere in these scores, it’s in the answer to QoI-1. Although My
Winnipeg isn’t very educational in the sense of teaching basic facts, maybe
it teaches critical thinking skills by forcing viewers to parse fact from
fiction, or emotional knowledge by showing them complex emotional
experiences, or social skills by making them put themselves in the mind of the
narrator. These are plausible and they are part of what QoI-1 is meant to
encompass. I’m simply not convinced that anyone is leaving My Winnipeg with
more of these skills, certainly not with noticeably more of these skills than
they’d get out of the average movie.
By being more
sophisticated than Avatar, the film might be better at making viewers
more sophisticated or more thoughtful or see the world in a new light. I think
that is true to an extent, but I’m skeptical of the idea that people learn core
ideas and values through art. This is a somewhat arbitrary call though and My
Winnipeg may deserve a +1 in answer to QoI-1.
According to my
criteria, art house films are not inherently more effective than Hollywood
blockbusters, even if it possesses more of the traditional criteria of artistic
greatness. Unless the art house film is especially likely to provoke specific
patterns of thinking or specific actions, the difference in “greatness” might
not actually amount to anything worth caring about. More research needs to be done on the concrete benefits of standard criteria of artistic greatness.