“I’ve been thinking about Medium Cool a lot lately,” writes Chuck Tryon at Newcritics. “In part because I’m teaching it, but also because the film’s treatment of history and documentary would seem to inform the debates about Brian DePalma’s Redacted and the decision to remove some documentary photographs from the film’s final montage.” Chuck hasn’t seen Redacted yet, but he makes some interesting connections in the full post, which you can read here. I havent’ seen Medium Cool since my first year of college (that’s about nine years, if you’re counting), and Chuck’s post inspired me to try to dig up some clips online. All I could find was the trailer above.
The thing that struck me when watching the trailer is that it looks very “real.” Obviously, I’m too young to have seen Medium Cool at the time of its release, so I don’t know if this is really a legitimate response–I don’t really know what “real” looked like in 1969. But even if it’s just a so-so approximation of 1969 reality, Medium Cool would seem to have something over Redacted, which wants to be a dispatch straight from contemporary popular media but, with its school play version of combat and video blogs kabuki, fails miserably.
Check out the Medium Cool trailer above, and the Redacted trailer below the jump. The almost image-free Redacted trailer is the ultimate teaser, a physical illustration of Brian DePalma’s insistence that the whole movie is comprised of material that an unnamed someone doesn’t want you to see. As Chuck notes, Medium Cool was, literally a movie that was considered too controversial and ground-breaking for release. In contrast, its trailer plays as a perfectly preserved slice of zeitgeist.
I love this blog and podcast and makes feel good people love film as much as I do.
I recently just listened to the ifc blog and it was maddening to listen to there negative drible and “list’s” that get populated by films that have only come out in the last 2 decades.
I guess what i am saying is thanks.
Well, thank you. I actually like the IFC Blog, but I also like compliments.
I guess it was just the one i heard, the IFC Blog just did an hour on sophmore slumps. Not news, not love of film, just directors who get a success and screw it up. Im not a fan of that kind of negative re-enforcement. that means whoever listen to that show and doesnt know alot or love film means there going to agree a dismiss something wonderful. Case in point - Lindsay Andersons O Lucky Man! came out on dvd today.
[...] Longworth responded to my Newcritics post on Medium Cool and Redacted by tracking down and comparing the trailers for both [...]