David Thomson has a new book out, A Sudden Flicker of Light: A Revisionist History of Movies, in which he convinces himself that the artform to which he has dedicated his entire life is actually corrupting civilisation and profoundly responsible for the current political hellscape.
In a New York Times profile titled "Did Movies Ruin Everything?," A.O. Scott, himself a distinguished film critic, gives the nutshell:
"According to Thomson, movies — especially American movies — have whitewashed history, glorified violence and made role models out of thugs, narcissists and murderers. The consequences shape our public life. Donald Trump “is our movie man,” Thomson writes, meaning that Trump’s presidency, which Thomson sees as a catastrophe, was foretold and to some extent made possible by Hollywood....Turning our humanity upside down and our values inside out is what good movies do. It’s what movies do best. A Sudden Flicker of Light trains its gaze... on certain indelible characters — Charles Foster Kane, Michael Corleone, Hannibal Lecter — who have become icons of charismatic degeneracy. Their ambiguous collective legacy is summed up in the book’s verdict on “The Godfather”: “So much that is grand — and too much that is a disgrace.”
Scott zooms in on key quotes from the book: “attention has become infernal, hopeless, yet unstoppable”... “we let the lifelike distract us from life” ... "We are no longer the selves we hoped to be. We are not exactly alive any longer.” And he also highlights a distinction between film / cinema / the movies (with the definite article) and Thomson's use of the word "movie" as an open-ended term for this blurring of reality and unreality: "Movie”... refers not to an individual film but to the mode of cognition, the way of seeing and imagining the world, that the medium has imposed on us. Whether or not we go to the movies, most of us live in what he sometimes calls “the condition of movie,” a state of perpetual fantasy and denial."
Thomson is a learned man (not just about his chosen special subject,....which anyway touches on almost everything in the world, the other artforms, human history etc... to write about film with his level of penetration is to write about all things). So is A.O. Scott. So I'm surprised that either of them think these ideas are new.
"Movie" is more or less the same as the Spectacle, as theorized and denounced by Guy Debord and the Situationists. The angle of Situationist concern, though, was less about corruption of the moral core in the audience and more about an alleged passivity and isolation induced by spectactorship (of film, TV, sports, etc) (a questionable idea for many reasons). In his later Comments on the Society of Spectacle, Debord's emphasis did shift to the idea on contemporary life as saturated with lies and propaganda.
"Movie" is as also very similar in tone and tenor as Daniel J. Boorstin's book The Image, widely read on its 1961 publication and partly inspired by the election campaign of John F. Kennedy. Boorstin railed against “the menace of unreality” creeping into every area of American national life and mass culture. He diagnosed a social-cultural malaise of “nothingness,” in which “the vacuum of our experience is actually made emptier by our anxious straining with mechanical devices to fill it artificially.” Television, advertising and political theater is more the focus of The Image than Hollywood but to the extent that it is about the world seen through screens, the critique is close to Thomson's "movie" and absurdly applicable still to our present. Deep fakes and AI bring a dystopian supercharge to Boorstin's warnings about “a new elusiveness, iridescence, and ambiguity” contaminating everyday life.
But these kinds of anxieties go even further back: there's a current of anti-mimesis running through Western Civilisation all the way back to Plato. A particularly vivid eruption of it came with the Puritan crusade against the theatre. 17th Century tracts denouncing the play houses rehearse many of the fears and doubts that afflict Thomson in A Sudden Flicker of Light. The way stage plays make audiences identify with the strongest characters on the stage, who are often the most evil. The way that theatre stirs up violent emotions and irrational passions - and alluringly depict sins and vices of all kinds. The simple unreality of it all. During Cromwell's rule, the playhouses were actually closed down and theatre went into the underground, with covert performances in private houses.
Still I should probably hold off a bit until I've actually read A Sudden Flicker. If anyone could eke out some interesting new thoughts out of these age-old reflexes, it's Thomson.
I've had moments like this myself where I've decided that rock music (and its inheritor rap) is the exaltation of selfishness, recklessness, egomania, impulse, short-term gratification, waste, destruction and risky behaviours etc) and that some future society organized around egalitarian and conservationist principles, zero growth, custodianship of the Earth, etc etc will look back on the entire era of youth culture / popular music as a fever of decadence - a disease of late-stage capitalism. I too have had a sort of falling out of love with the genre or at least a kind of deeply conflicted shame, unable to reconcile my love of the Stooges, punk with the fully grown-up, responsible, parental, civic-minded person I am now.
Andrew Keen has an interview with David Thomson at Keen On
Right from the start, Thomson uses the word "spectators" repeatedly.
And Andrew Keen says at one point "David, we could have been having this conversation in the Sixties."
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Related to this theme is the new book Screen People: How We Entertained Ourselves Into a State of Emergency by Megan Garber. Which I do have in front of me and will be reading soon.
In a book promoting piece via her main outlet The Atlantic, Garber claims that "with the rise of screen culture, all the world has stage fright".
The beta-blocker propranolol has been a mainstay of American medicine since the 1960s, when it was regularly prescribed as a first-line defense against hypertension, arrhythmia, and other cardiovascular problems. Recent years, though, have seen a boom in the medication’s prescription rates—in part because as the drug regulates the heart, it also settles the nerves. Off-label, propranolol is used to calm the assorted storms of stage fright: the sweaty palms, the belly churn, the racing heart. Even professional performers have publicly alluded to using it. Robert Downey Jr., accepting an award at the 2024 Golden Globes, said casually, “I took a beta-blocker, so this is going to be a breeze.” Last fall, a People magazine headline asked, “Why Is Everyone Suddenly Taking the Decades-Old Chill Pill Propranolol?”
One answer is that stage fright, in the world shaped by the internet, is no longer limited to the stage. Smartphones and the social-media platforms installed on them—portable movie studios in miniature—have transformed their users into life’s cinematographers, directors, producers, and distributors. Those capabilities are at this point familiar. But in ways that are steadily becoming more clear, they are also transforming relationships—adding new uncertainty to what were once mundane interactions, tweaking people’s nervous systems, unsteadying their very sense of self.
"They have brought new vulnerabilities and, for many people, new apprehension to the simple act of existing in public, where anyone is at risk of being ensnared in another person’s lens. You might be taken out of context. You might be cast as the star—or as an extra, or as scenery—in someone else’s show. You might be edited, turned into a hero or a villain or a joke. No medication can cure the broader societal ailment: Mass self-consciousness is ascendant. Performance anxiety is becoming a way of life.
She harps on about a term that I also have noticed as indicative of the times: "main character" or "main character energy" (versus non player character).
"Words once reserved for describing dramas on the stage or screen have been repurposed to describe consumers’ ordinary realities.... People now narrate their personal “character arcs” and bemoan those who have “lost the plot” or been “canceled'... Main-character energy is, in that sense, a turn of phrase that hints at a widespread condition: the ever-more-inescapable demands of performance.
"... Consider the ubiquity of the word performative—which, in its modern use, has come to serve as a description and an all-purpose insult....
" Invoking performativity, people now blithely reject other people’s actions—and, by extension, other people’s claims about their own lives—as fakery made in the service of the show....
"The main character, after all, has one job: to put on a good show. But when the show never ends, the need to stage-manage doesn’t either. And that can be exhausting."
My kids just told me a couple of young people expressions that fit this context:
“Last night was a movie” (to describe a memorably epic night out)
“Screenager” (although that is probably more a journalistic or parental term than one used by actual kids)
Going back to the Thomson critique and its perennial nature, Megan Garber herself invokes Erving Goffman's classic book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life - which is from the late 1950s - and she could easily have also mentioned Daniel J. Boorstin and The Image. (May well do in the book itself)
Warhol - another figure from 60 years ago! - is also mentioned: "Celebrities, consequently, are what Andy Warhol once called “half people”: flesh-and-blood humans who function, for their admirers and detractors, not as facts but as fictions. They also function as images to be read, analyzed, and judged."
Crikey, an even earlier figure is cited: "the sociologist Charles Horton Cooley, writing around the turn of the 20th century, described the rise of the “looking-glass self,” the tendency to perceive one’s self through other people’s reactions. Phone-based life has made Cooley’s concept literal—and immediate. Never before have we seen ourselves so incessantly. Never has self-consciousness about the way we present been so intense."
Garber talks about how expensive this performance oriented way of living is: cosmetic surgery, the return of sunbed tanning.
Most striking to me is the return of false eyelashes (I went to the doctor recently and every single young woman working at reception had false lashes).
But then again that too was a mid-Century thing. It was also time when it was quite common for women to have a wardrobe of wigs.
In truth, fakery and image- projection, costuming and cosmetics - it's been around forever.
The publisher's blurb for Screen People:
"An eye-opening look at how the current media landscape has incentivized us to see our fellow citizens as characters in an ongoing entertainment—and how we can fight back, from the popular and award-winning staff writer for The Atlantic.
"Whether it’s our reality-television-star President or our expertly curated Instagram feeds, the line between fact and fiction—between what’s real and what’s fabricated for entertainment—has never been more blurred. Screen People explores what happens when we cede our reality to spectacle. Megan Garber explains how today’s internet-inflected culture conditions us to see one another not as people but as characters in an ongoing show, and how some of our most chronic and harmful social conditions—loneliness, depression, mistrust, misinformation, cynicism—stem from our demand for diversion.
"In ten chapters, each themed around an element of entertainment—from “The Producers,” who edit our reality, to “The Extras,” the strangers we turn into objects of our amusement, to “the Haters,” the worshipful Qanon-types who expect the prophecies of their anonymous leader to play out on live television—Garber argues that this comedy of our daily lives is quickly becoming tragedy. And we can’t understand our politics without first understanding our culture.
"Like The Anxious Generation but about our media diet, Screen People shows why Megan Garber is one of the most respected and widely-read journalists of our day. It is an urgent, page-turning, and dazzling look at how we entertained ourselves into our current predicament, and how we might find our way out of the maze of misinformation and chaos."
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A New York magazine piece claims that MAGA will lose interest as Trump's knack for Spectacle falters:
Hours before Donald Trump addressed the nation on its 250th anniversary, the National Mall was in chaos. A storm was on the way, and law enforcement had ordered the MAGA faithful to evacuate — a process that did not go smoothly. People had waited in the extreme heat for hours to celebrate Trump and America; now they argued with the Secret Service and chanted “USA, USA” out of fury.
By now the mess is familiar. The Great American State Fair attracted small crowds; some states even declined to participate. Bret Michaels backed out, and so did Martina McBride. A mock-up of Trump’s triumphal arch oozed a puslike substance, and a robot dog danced alone in the mud. Nearby, the reflecting pool sat green and full of algae, lethal to ducklings and irresistible to protesters, who demonstrated next to it in costume. Two days before the storm, a portion of the stage broke off and nearly struck dancers who were in the middle of a rehearsal.
Trump’s tastes have always been entertaining, if garish, writes Sarah Jones. Lately, though, the seams are fraying. “If Trump can’t throw a good party or make everything golden, what’s left? Loyalists have leaned on MAGA for glitz and a little excitement. Without spectacle, the future of the movement is in jeopardy.”

