I discovered TCM about a year or so ago and it may just have become my favourite and most frequented station. I love the format and I'm blown away by the airing of uncut, commercial free films seen in their entirety. It's a wonderful compliment to my own small yet slowly growing film collection of classic and contemporary movies.
When I was younger in my teens and twenties I didn't appreciate classic films so much. I was too caught up in the "here and now." But as I have gotten older I've grown to appreciate the glimpses into times before my own as well as the wonderful creativity and nuance of those films that I overlooked before. I've also been struck by the commonality of substance many of those films have with us today despite the differences in style and appearance. A case in point would be the '50s era films Patterns and Executive Suite wherein all the things we comment today about corporatism and such are all there in those movies. There really is very little new under the sun when we can see that folks of the past can still speak to us about our present.
And in some odd way those films speak to me unlike many contemporary works don't. I find many current films too noisy and hyperactive sometimes. The older films also seem more in accord with the times I grew up in during the '60s and '70s. And I appreciate the sense or aura of romance in those older films that often is lacking today. Today romance is really near indistinguishable from sex with a genuine lack of real sentiment and emotional intimacy. Bette Davis' Now Voyager really nailed that for me as well as Bogart's Casablanca and Clark Gable's Soldier of Fortune.
It's also interesting to see where many now familiar cliches and cultural references took root in the visual medium.
And the classic also offer an added perspective when assessing contemporary works.
When I was younger in my teens and twenties I didn't appreciate classic films so much. I was too caught up in the "here and now." But as I have gotten older I've grown to appreciate the glimpses into times before my own as well as the wonderful creativity and nuance of those films that I overlooked before. I've also been struck by the commonality of substance many of those films have with us today despite the differences in style and appearance. A case in point would be the '50s era films Patterns and Executive Suite wherein all the things we comment today about corporatism and such are all there in those movies. There really is very little new under the sun when we can see that folks of the past can still speak to us about our present.
And in some odd way those films speak to me unlike many contemporary works don't. I find many current films too noisy and hyperactive sometimes. The older films also seem more in accord with the times I grew up in during the '60s and '70s. And I appreciate the sense or aura of romance in those older films that often is lacking today. Today romance is really near indistinguishable from sex with a genuine lack of real sentiment and emotional intimacy. Bette Davis' Now Voyager really nailed that for me as well as Bogart's Casablanca and Clark Gable's Soldier of Fortune.
It's also interesting to see where many now familiar cliches and cultural references took root in the visual medium.
And the classic also offer an added perspective when assessing contemporary works.