2. Not unusual for audiences & critics to react differently to movies, nor for filmmakers to use hostile criticism to drum up attention. What's more interesting in way politics feeds into divide on movie.
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3. Like Michael Moore before him, Adam McKay might be finding out that in political filmmaking there's a trade-off between critical praise & reaching a mass audience.
@DavidKlion & I talk about Don't Look Up & McKay's career.https://jeetheer.substack.com/p/podcast-critics-are-down-on-dont?r=bh54&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email …Show this thread
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Critics are wrong again.
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I’m not surprised. At all. It’s a good movie. Funny how each party seems to see each other in it. Meanwhile the rest of us are sitting down for dinner.
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Mark Rylance is incredible in it
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Critical acclaim was not its mission.
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I thought it was real good. Perfect commentary on the era we live in. Substitute climate change or COVID for the comet
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Bernie would have won.
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