THE SCHREIBER THEORY: A RADICAL REWRITE
OF AMERICAN FILM HISTORY
By David Kipen
BAMBI VS. GODZILLA: ON THE NATURE, PURPOSE, AND PRACTICE OF THE MOVIE
BUSINESS
By David Mamet
In the days when I used to care about movies, one of my favourite movie
guides (a genre that has since been put on the endangered list by the all-powerful
Internet Movie Database) was Halliwell's, and in particular the early
volumes prepared by Leslie Halliwell himself. One of the unusual things about it
was the way it listed writers ahead of directors in the credits. This was no
accident. Halliwell wanted it that way because he felt that writers were, all
things considered, just as important as directors to the finished product.
In fact, for a long time they were even more important. The screenplay in the
old studio system was everything, with directors just hired to hold the camera.
This importance, however, did not translate into money, status, or power.
Screenwriters were still regarded by the studios as disposable, unglamorous, virtually
anonymous hacks. Producer Irving Thalberg, who should have known, was of the opinion that "the
writer is the most important person in Hollywood, but we must never tell the
sons of bitches."
Of course, this was all a long time ago. As Variety editor Peter Bart succinctly
put it in his account of the summer 1998 film season The Gross, today "the
writer really doesn't matter." No kidding. Two of the Academy Award
nominees for best screenplay of 2006 didn't even have screenplays (Borat,
which was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay because it was basically a
series of improvised sketches based on a
character from Da Ali G Show, and United 93, which was nominated
for Best Original Screenplay but was also
heavily improvised).
Clearly the writer is no longer the most important person in Hollywood.
Indeed he has largely become an irrelevance whose function is now handled by committee.
This is the reality faced by critic David Kipen in The Schreiber Theory,
subtitled "A Radical Rewrite of American Film History." It's important
to flag that final word. In so far as the Schreiber Theory has any
applicability, and I think it has some, it is retrospective. It offers a new way
of understanding and interpreting film history. What makes it radical is
its (I think belabored) opposition to the once fashionable auteur theory,
which was an idea coming out of French film criticism that saw the director as
the primary creative author of a film. "Schreiber" is Yiddish for
"writer," and Kipen sees his essay as "an attempt to explode the
director-centric farrago of good intentions, bad faith, and tortured logic that
goes by the name of auteurism, and to replace it with a
screenwriter-centered way of thinking about film." After all, "despite
the shifting tides of critical theory, film has always been a writer's
medium."
Well, no. That's going a bit too far. Still, Kipen does make a somewhat
plausible case for screenwriters having "more recognizable signatures, and
better batting averages" than directors. And so there is ground here for a
revision of film history. The problem is moving forward. As noted, the status
and importance of the screenwriter is not in the ascendant. And Kipen admits
that, if anything, "screenwriters have it even rougher in an ever more
globalized Hollywood than directors do, because dialogue - while only part of
what screenwriters do - is still the part that most often gets lost in
translation." In addition, the dominance of comic
book/videogame/action-oriented juvenilia has pretty much displaced the art of
the word. "The old emphasis on voice and script has given way to an
Esperanto of violence and spectacle." At least in America. L. A. Times
film columnist Patrick Goldstein is quoted as saying that "In today's
Hollywood, if you're talking about serious drama, the original script is almost
as extinct as the wooly mammoth." As a result, "It would take some
serious wishful thinking to look at the current filmmaking landscape and see a
terrain ripe for schreiberist revolution." By putting forward his
"schreiberist countermyth" to the auteur theory,
however, Kipen hopes to inspire or at least gently prod the industry in a new
direction. His manifesto is just "a necessary practical prelude to finally
getting a few better movies made."
It's something we'd all like to see. After all, one can't help but look at
the immense amount of money, talent, and hard work that Hollywood absorbs and be
a little in awe at how massive a creative failure it is. The question of how
things went so wrong (if they were ever right) is one that has exercised critics
quite a bit over the years. The typical response, that it has become all about
the money and the product industrialized, is not entirely convincing since the
movie business has always and only been about the money and has always been an
industry. Nevertheless, beginning with the screenplay (which is as good a place
as any to begin), David Mamet lines the usual suspects up as the villains of the
piece. The title of this irregular collection of musings, Bambi vs. Godzilla,
is a metaphor for the conflict between show people and businesspeople in
Hollywood. One doesn't have to know Marv Newland's short film to guess who wins.
And so in answer to the question "How Scripts Got So Bad," he points
to how "the industrial model demands conformity." Opposed to the
dedicated and skilled laborers and creative visionaries who actually make films
is the corporate bureaucrat counting beans.
This much is old hat and, as Mamet puts it, "boo hoo" anyway.
Mamet is a master of dialogue and voice, but can scarcely write a coherent
paragraph of prose. Bambi vs. Godzilla comes snarling off the page like a
cranky monologue. Cranky, and for such a successful writer surprisingly bitter
too. Years after the squabbles over Oleanna he's still pissed off at
political correctness, and has now added a nearly hysterical anti-anti-Semitism
to his little list. The Western press is anti-Israel? Hollywood is out to get
the Jews? Accusations of a liberal bias in the news seem reasonable in
comparison to claims as paranoid as these.
In a book as random and meandering as this one can only hope to pick up an occasional
insight. Often these come in the form of bits and pieces of Hollywood wisdom
preserved in anecdotes. But Mamet has some good original material as well,
typically expressed as snappy and provocative analogies:
The Hollywood corporate bureaucracy is the same as that of Enron:
"executives who saw that the power to grow wealthy stemmed from the brave
decision to stop making anything at all."
Summer blockbusters are like the Defense Department: "we are reassured
by their presence rather than their content or operations. As examples of waste
they appeal to our need - not for entertainment but for security."
Modern screenplays are like personal ads: "Just as the personal ad is
written not to attract anyone specifically but only to avoid exclusion, the
'lazy Sunday mornings' screenplay strives to appeal to all - or to those who
think it might appeal to all. In this it also resembles a political speech,
written to lull and, by its soporific cadence and vocabulary, to allow the
listener to intuit whatever the hell he wants."
Today's comedies are like porn, or the circus: "a loose assemblage"
and "presentation of individually complete, intellectually empty effects
(tricks, turns), such that the progress, one to the next, mimics the emotional
journey undergone by the listener involved in the progression of an actual
drama."
This is all interesting stuff. Unfortunately it is buried in a slap-dash text
that one imagines being more fun to listen to than to read. A lot of the time
Mamet seems to be talking off the top of his head as well. His synopsis of Bambi
Meets Godzilla (the movie) suggests that he has not actually seen it. And he
wildly misattributes a line from Henry V to Othello, where it
would make no sense at all. Noticing mistakes like these, one starts to wonder
how much faith we can put in some of the other things he says. Unconventional
thinking is always appreciated when it comes to making critical judgments, but
is The Killing "the world's greatest film noir"? Is Galaxy
Quest a "perfect film"? These are the sort of throwaway opinions
we might toss into an informal conversation, but I don't think they stand very
much looking into.
"American film history may currently be entering its third act,"
Kipen writes. Or maybe not. My own sense is that film as we have known it is
over. This is based on two observations: (1) more of the audience is electing to
stay home and watch DVDs on their home entertainment systems, which is a
different experience from going to the theatre; and (2) videogames have replaced
movies in terms of sales. Whether film, which has always been a species of mass
entertainment, can survive with all of its enormous costs as a form of fringe
culture is doubtful. Perhaps, however, such a shift might lead to a situation
where Bambi will be able to escape Godzilla. The giant lizard will be off
destroying cities elsewhere, and the next generation of David Mamets will be
able to reclaim the suddenly less-than-commanding heights of Hollywood.
When no one, alas, is looking.
Notes:
Review first published online March 6, 2007. With regard to Bambi Meets
Godzilla, "one of the great cinematic delights of the sixties," Mamet
provides the following synopsis for "those who have not been blessed":
"a young scampering Bambi crests a hill and looks winningly to the right
and left. He raises his ears, sensing danger. A huge billion-ton monster,
Godzilla, comes over the hill and stomps Bambi into preserves. Roll
credits." Almost none of this is correct. Bambi does not scamper, does not
look to the right and left, and there is no hill to crest or come over. The
short film almost entirely consists of opening and closing credits.
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