David Kipen briefly abandons the seat of national power to swing through the old 'hood on a barnstorming tour for his new book The Schreiber Theory. (We've yet to see a review copy but we're hopeful.) Tonight's the first event down at Redcat. He'll be paired with Nicholas Meyer which, frankly, sounds like a helluva lotta fun. (We can't make it, sadly, but we plan to be in the audience for his Friday night appearance at Dutton's Brentwood.)
The Schreiber Theory and the Politics of Movie Authorship: A Dialogue with David Kipen and Nick Meyer REDCAT / Roy and Edna Disney CalArts Theater at Disney Hall Thursday, February 9 @ 8:30 p.m. 631 West 2nd Street Los Angeles, CA 90012 Admission: $12; students: $8; CalArts ID: free REDCAT box office: 213-237-2800
Who really deserves credit for a film? Is it the director, as the French auteur theory has long held? This question has been reopened by critic David Kipen in his new book The Schreiber Theory, in which Kipen declares that knowing who wrote a movie is often a far better guide to knowing whether a movie will be any good. Kipen defends his theory on stage in a discussion with director Nicholas Meyer, who also happens to be the screenwriter of the films such as Fatal Attraction and The Human Stain. Meyer, like Kipen, is an astonishingly quick and erudite wit, but is he a schreiberist, or an auteurist?
The debate promises to be lively and wide-ranging: Why has the role of the writer seemed to diminish while the role of the director has come to dominate? Why are there fewer writing award categories in the Academy Awards than there used to be? How is the art of screenwriting threatened by the international marketing of American films? David Kipen and Nicholas Meyer offer their surprising answers on these questions and more in their first-ever joint appearance, and the first public discussion of Kipen’s The Schreiber Theory.
Kipen is also the editor of the latest issue of the Los Angeles Review, to which he invited us to contribute "Paradise Leveraged," a review of DJ Waldie's latest collection of essays Where We Are Now: Notes from Los Angeles. It's not available online, sadly, so here's the opening - you'll have to visit a well-stocked newsstand or order a copy if you want to see the rest ... (Ed and Laila are featured as well.)
That many of us would consider the title “Bard of Suburbia” to be a dubious distinction is precisely the sort of thinking that drives D.J. Waldie (a man who can lay fair claim to – and would likely embrace – that designation) crazy. In the 28 essays that comprise his new collection Where We Are Now: Notes from Los Angeles, Waldie, a public official with the City of Lakewood who doesn’t drive a car and has lived in the same 957 square-foot house his parents bought there in 1946, stands poised against grandiose, overblown dreams, a patron saint of modest expectations.
This bracing if sometimes uneven volume has been assembled from pieces that originally ran in the Los Angeles Times, the L.A. Weekly, New York Times, Salon, the Orange County Weekly, dwell magazine and Buzz magazine. Though they run the gamut in subject matter, they are linked by Waldie’s steadfast belief in the restorative power of community. That Los Angeles seems perversely designed to undermine that sense of community is what gives Waldie his fire.
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