Good-Bad

If anybody bothers to follow my movie viewing history, they’ll know that it includes a perhaps disproportionate number of “bad movies.”  In fact, I recently added that as a category for my blog posts.  In need of some reassurance, I read Matthew Strohl’s Why It’s OK To Love Bad Movies.  (As far as I can tell the Why It’s OK series was started by my old boss at Routledge—an inspired idea!)  Strohl is a philosopher, but one who admits to, and even advocates for, loving bad movies.  This book is fun but it does have a serious philosophical underpinning.  I can’t summarize it all here (you need to read the book anyway) but my main takeaways are that ridicule isn’t making the world a better place.  Movies that are so bad that they’re good are definitely a reality.  There’s a community built around it, but I haven’t had many visits from it in my lonely little corner of the internet here.

Strohl points out that not all bad movies are what he terms “good-bad.”  There are certain qualities—aesthetic qualities—that make a bad movie good.  And it doesn’t involve watching the movies to make fun of them.  One of the films that often tops the list is The Room.  When I first saw it I really couldn’t think of anything to write about it on this blog.  It was just another bad movie.  Now I want to see it again.  I do have to say that on my first viewing I didn’t feel like ridiculing.  I was more stunned than that.  And when I watched Plan 9 from Outer Space—another on the list—I felt inspired to learn more about Ed Wood, its famous director.  I’ve since watched a couple more of his movies and I appreciated them.  Now I have a better idea of why.

In addition to discussing the biggies, Strohl also takes forays into some collectives: the Twilight series, for example, and the movies of Nicholas Cage.  These are both often singled out for ridicule, but this book demonstrates that there’s an artistry to such things.  And Bad Movies underscores that not everyone likes the same bad movies.  Strohl also makes the salient point that if we only ever watch great movies we’d have no basis for comparison.  There’s a lot to like in this little book.  One thing it convinced me of (in addition to making me feel a bit better about myself) is that there’s a community out there that I’m missing out on.  Good books bring people together instead of dividing into factions.  This is a good book.

6 thoughts on “Good-Bad

  1. I discovered Ed Wood movies with the Tim Burton’s movie : ‘Ed Wood’. Martin Landau playing Bela Lugosi was fantastic. We can also add a sub-categories of bad movies : ‘3-D bad movies’ Like the remasterised 3-D version of : ‘Robot Monster’.

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  2. Jeff Hora

    I guess I’ve been captivated by bad movies (and to a lesser extent, bad TV…) for a very long time. While Mystery Science Theater 3000 became a part of my theatrical framework decades ago, it also moved me to watch the un-riffed versions of many of them and come to individual conclusions about whether they were utterly bad, mostly bad, intentionally bad, etc.

    I believe you’ll find a fairly enormous community of folks out here who appreciate this kind of cinema, especially as the various platforms (Amazon Prime, Netflix, Hulu, Apple+, Paramount+, Showtime, and uncountable others….) work at filling their vaults. The “for free” aspect of a sizable portion of this stuff is a big draw, for sure. The community is growing in perhaps unintended ways, but the sprawl is happening!

    Thanks for YET ANOTHER BOOK recommendation. Jeez, man…..I’m never going to be able to get to all the content I need and/or want to read. My eyes cross and blur after awhile! 😉

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    • Thanks, Jeff. You get it! Strohl takes MST3 to task for making fun rather than fostering appreciation. This really is a good book and its message of tolerance for other tastes is a solid one.

      After reading it I had to watch Troll 2 (blog post to follow) which was free on Pluto TV. I’m sure there’s a community out there but I’m not quite certain how to find them. Many of us are somewhat embarrassed by this admission, I guess.

      I really enjoyed this one, and even the shift in perspective on Nicholas Cage was good. Keep reading!

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