This kind of thread has been brewing in my mind for awhile now, but I've decided to go ahead and get it over with.
So, recently, Venom released, having a 30% critic score on RT, with an audience score of 89%. Once again, this triggered the cycle of "critics are out of touch, critics don't know how to have fun, this movie was made for fans," etc. Y'know, the same rigamarole that happens every time this thing comes up.
Except...are the critics "out of touch?" Well, first of all, I disagree that's even a relavant point, as a critic is meant to look at a film as objectively as possible and judge the film on how it succeeds as a film. To cite one example off the top of my head, the Warcraft movie. Did I like it? Yes. Did it give me gratuitous fan service? Yes. Is it "good?" Fuck no. Simiarly, the idea that "X is made for the fans" has never been a valid excuse in my mind, because if you're producing a piece of art, and expect people to pay for it, it should be able to stand on its own merits. Plus, the idea that people are spending millions of dollars just for the fans is something that doesn't really add up, in every sense of the word. The MCU for instance didn't get as big as it was by being a 1:1 version of the comics, any more than the Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings films were by being a 1:1 adaptation of their books. I'd expect a critic to have a different opinion from the average filmgoer on average, because not only are they meant to have studied the art and craft of film, but even if they haven't, in theory, they should have still seen far more films than average Joe.
So, fine. Maybe I'm just part of the "global elite" or somesuch. Except if we're using Rotten Tomatoes as a metric of the critic/fan divide, let's look at the films currently out now. For said films, I'll list the critic score and audience score:
Venom: 30% vs. 89%
Wajib: 100% vs. 83%
Smallfoot: 73% vs. 68%
The House with a Clock in the Walls: 67% vs. 49%
Christopher Robin: 71% vs. 86%
Night School: 27% vs. 47%
A Simple Favour: 85% vs. 79%
Crazy Rich Asians: 92% vs. 80%
A Star is Born: 91% vs. 85%
Ghost Stories: 82% vs. 60%
Lean on Pete: 92% vs. 74%
Running the numbers from this sample size, on average, the difference between fans and critics comes to 18%.
Now, this is far too small a sample size to say anything definitive, but if the average difference is 16%, that...doesn't really suggest any kind of "out of touch" phenomena. That suggests a reasonable amount of deviation. Compare the average of 18% to the 59% difference of Venom, and it's clear that Venom is an outlier, not indicative of the actual, overall divide.
Now, that's not to say that I always agree with critics (or fans) - there's movies that have been lauded/panned for reasons I just don't understand why, and I'm pretty sure that's true for all of us, and not just in movies. But I find it eye-rolling every time the "critics are out of touch" argument comes up because usually, if one agrees with the critics, people are usually fine to say "X was critically acclaimed" not "the critics are out of touch, but they managed to get it right this time."
Anyway, thoughts?
So, recently, Venom released, having a 30% critic score on RT, with an audience score of 89%. Once again, this triggered the cycle of "critics are out of touch, critics don't know how to have fun, this movie was made for fans," etc. Y'know, the same rigamarole that happens every time this thing comes up.
Except...are the critics "out of touch?" Well, first of all, I disagree that's even a relavant point, as a critic is meant to look at a film as objectively as possible and judge the film on how it succeeds as a film. To cite one example off the top of my head, the Warcraft movie. Did I like it? Yes. Did it give me gratuitous fan service? Yes. Is it "good?" Fuck no. Simiarly, the idea that "X is made for the fans" has never been a valid excuse in my mind, because if you're producing a piece of art, and expect people to pay for it, it should be able to stand on its own merits. Plus, the idea that people are spending millions of dollars just for the fans is something that doesn't really add up, in every sense of the word. The MCU for instance didn't get as big as it was by being a 1:1 version of the comics, any more than the Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings films were by being a 1:1 adaptation of their books. I'd expect a critic to have a different opinion from the average filmgoer on average, because not only are they meant to have studied the art and craft of film, but even if they haven't, in theory, they should have still seen far more films than average Joe.
So, fine. Maybe I'm just part of the "global elite" or somesuch. Except if we're using Rotten Tomatoes as a metric of the critic/fan divide, let's look at the films currently out now. For said films, I'll list the critic score and audience score:
Venom: 30% vs. 89%
Wajib: 100% vs. 83%
Smallfoot: 73% vs. 68%
The House with a Clock in the Walls: 67% vs. 49%
Christopher Robin: 71% vs. 86%
Night School: 27% vs. 47%
A Simple Favour: 85% vs. 79%
Crazy Rich Asians: 92% vs. 80%
A Star is Born: 91% vs. 85%
Ghost Stories: 82% vs. 60%
Lean on Pete: 92% vs. 74%
Running the numbers from this sample size, on average, the difference between fans and critics comes to 18%.
Now, this is far too small a sample size to say anything definitive, but if the average difference is 16%, that...doesn't really suggest any kind of "out of touch" phenomena. That suggests a reasonable amount of deviation. Compare the average of 18% to the 59% difference of Venom, and it's clear that Venom is an outlier, not indicative of the actual, overall divide.
Now, that's not to say that I always agree with critics (or fans) - there's movies that have been lauded/panned for reasons I just don't understand why, and I'm pretty sure that's true for all of us, and not just in movies. But I find it eye-rolling every time the "critics are out of touch" argument comes up because usually, if one agrees with the critics, people are usually fine to say "X was critically acclaimed" not "the critics are out of touch, but they managed to get it right this time."
Anyway, thoughts?