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Critics at Large | The New Yorker

Portraits of the Artist

Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The New Yorker

Society & Culture

4.4679 Ratings

🗓️ 4 January 2024

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hollywood’s obsession with stories about creative types has resulted in familiar tropes—namely that of the tortured artist, whose fanatical devotion to his craft makes him an enigma to those around him—and story formulae like the bio-pic, which runs through the beats of its subject’s career like a Wikipedia entry. In this episode of Critics at Large, the staff writers Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss how some of the year’s buzziest films subvert our expectations of art about artists. “Maestro” is “a fantasia on Leonard Bernstein themes” that focusses on the toll that the legendary composer’s charisma exacts on those around him. “May December,” directed by Todd Haynes, is “a dark satire on certain tendencies in method acting.” And Cord Jefferson’s début feature, “American Fiction,” pairs a critique of the publishing industry’s hollow nods toward “diversity” with a quiet family drama. The hosts also consider other, more deliberately unglamorous depictions, such as that found in Kelly Reichardt’s “Showing Up.” The movie, which follows a sculptor struggling to make ends meet, raises the question of a much rarer archetype. “It seems to me a figure that can take more plumbing,” Cunningham says. “I want to see what that new figure, the everyday artist, can unfold to us about what it means to have a life in art.”

Read, watch, and listen with the critics:

“Adaptation” (2002)
“American Fiction” (2023)
“A Conversation with My Father,” by Grace Paley
Just Kids,” by Patti Smith
“Maestro” (2023)
“May December” (2023)
My Struggle,” by Karl Ove Knausgaard
“New York Stories” (1989)
“Showing Up” (2023)

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Critics at Large, a podcast from The New Yorker.

0:07.6

I'm Alex Schwartz.

0:08.9

I'm Nomi Fry.

0:09.9

And I'm Vincent Cunningham.

0:11.4

Happy New Year to you both.

0:12.5

We made it.

0:14.0

Barely.

0:16.0

But yes.

0:16.9

Sort of.

0:17.2

We've done it.

0:17.7

We did it.

0:18.4

We've made it into 2024.

0:20.3

Yes.

0:20.9

Here we are.

0:24.7

Each week on this show, we make sense of what's happening in the culture right now and how we got here.

0:30.0

How did you guys get here?

0:31.0

Are you guys good?

0:33.7

On foot.

0:36.7

No, but we are all, obviously, writers, and at least for me, as somebody engaged in a creative pursuit,

0:45.3

I'm always interested in how work like ours is depicted in the whiter culture.

0:50.8

So one thing I did during the break was watch a lot of the big movies I wanted

0:54.8

to catch up on, you know, the big prestige Oscar contenders. And many of them, I realize,

...

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