Not in Print: Two Film Scholars On The Internet: by Kristin Thompson
Not in Print: Two Film Scholars On The Internet: by Kristin Thompson
Not in Print: Two Film Scholars On The Internet: by Kristin Thompson
By Kristin Thompson
Considering that David Bordwell and I were relatively late to acquire our
first computers, we certainly did not expect to be regarded as pioneers in
exploration of possibilities of taking academic film writing online.
Our early forays were tentative enough. In 2000, David put up a website
on the ill-fated Geocities server. It contained his curriculum vitae and a
statement about “Studying Cinema.” (The statement is still on his website
.) A modest attempt, but he was the first faculty member in the
Department of Communication Arts here at the University of Wisconsin-
Madison to have a personal website. In 2005 he started adding essays,
beginning with “Film and the Historical Return.” The idea was to respond
to issues in the field, as well as to add supplements to his published
books. One such was “Figures Traced in Light: On Cinematic Staging,”
commenting on David’s book of the same title. The site was essentially a
way of doing traditional academic essays and getting them to readers
more quickly than journal publication could do. The site remained a small
part of David’s publishing.
I had no desire to establish my own website, and yet I was very much
online. In 2003 I launched a project to write about the Lord of the Rings
franchise which eventually became The Frodo Franchise: The Lord of the
Rings and Modern Hollywood (University of California Press, 2007). Not
only was I doing a great deal of my research online, but I was studying
the relationship of the Peter Jackson’s film and the internet. I examined
the official website, which was a pioneering one in a day when very few
films had their own websites. I also studied the quasi-sanctioned
unofficial sites and the range of fan sites that sprang up in response to
the film. I got so much cooperation from webmasters and contributors to
such sites that a planned single chapter on the Internet became two. I
sent the manuscript to the press in early 2006.
That was during the era when huge numbers of blogs were coming online
every day. Some were just ways of keeping in touch with friends and
family—a function that Facebook subsequently took over, thinning out the
blogosphere. Others were ways for young professionals to put themselves
in the public eye in the hope of getting a job or even finding some way to
monetize the blog and make a living with it. At that point the number of
blogs created each day was rapidly rising, and it peaked in roughly April
to August, 2006. By 2007, an average of a mere 120,000 new blogs was
being created daily. (See the “New Blogs Per Day” chart here.)
Countering all this enthusiasm was the fact that many bloggers
abandoned their sites within months. In May, 2007, only about 21% of
blogs then online were active.
Not great odds for success. Still, we were intrigued by the idea of having
this new way of getting ideas and information out to Film Art users and
anyone else who cared to visit our blog. We didn’t want to commit to a
two-week schedule, since we had no idea of predicting how often we
would be inspired to write something. We certainly had never aspired to
be film reviewers, so that idea didn’t appeal. Most of all, we didn’t want
the blog password-protected. If the blog was to promote Film Art, it had
to be available to non-users as well as those who had already adopted it.
Finally, and I think we knew this intuitively from the moment all this was
proposed, we could not allow comments on the blog. People have asked
us about this or even complained, but we’ve read the comments sections
of blogs. Some, like those on sites like Jim Emerson’s Scanners or Girish
Shambu’s Girish, are intelligent and original—but both are moderated.
We didn’t have the time or inclination to moderate comments. We also
suspected we would get questions from students covertly looking for help
on their term papers. (The more persistent ones can still email us
occasionally, and we ignore them.) For these reasons and more, the
comments feature on Observations on Film Art is not enabled. We have,
however, posted some items that include “discussions between the
authors and with experts.” David and I have had dialogues on Ratatouille
and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. A group of
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Frames
studentsCinema Journal
and alumni of the film program here at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison got together to discuss the merits of sequels. These
http://framescinemajournal.com
were crafted as entries, however, and not as a series of comments.
In fact when our blog went online a little over a year after it was
suggested to us (September 26, 2006), it went by a more cumbersome
name: Observations on Film Art and film art. The idea was to suggest
that, although the blog was tied to the textbook, it would range further
afield in exploring the art form. Eventually we dropped the second “film
art.”
One of the pleasures of the blog was that we could upload the entries and
post them ourselves. Meg Hamel, our amiable and efficient web czarina,
who had been taking care of David’s website, set us up on WordPress. It’s
so simple that even we could use it, though occasionally it would do odd
things like render half an entry in bold type. At such points we went
running to Meg for help. But as we have gained experience and
WordPress has improved, such panics rarely occur.
For our first few months we were exploring this new outlet for our work.
We tended to post often, and some of the entries were relatively short.
David happened to be going for the first time to the Vancouver
International Film Festival, so he reported, in two brief entries. Odd
though it seems in retrospect, there were no pictures in those first
entries. We soon learned to put images in, sizing and placing them. On
November 12, 2006, David posted the first of many analytical pieces
jammed with frame enlargements. We quickly discovered that one of the
advantages of a blog is that there is essentially no limit on the number of
illustrations we can use, and they can be in color, something that is
seldom possible with print publications. Sometime later we established
the policy of using illustrations in every post.
We use these frame enlargements on the same basis that we use the ones
in our textbooks and scholarly books: as fair use reproduction for
educational and analytical purposes. Twenty years ago I had the privilege
of chairing an ad hoc committee of the Society for Cinema Studies (now
the Society for Cinema and Media Studies) that examined the issue of fair
use of film frames. The report, which called upon experts in copyright
law, concluded that publishing even extended sets of frames was most
likely fair use. The crucial and helpful provision of the fair-use law is that
the copyright holder would have to prove that a specific set of
illustrations damaged the commercial value of the original
work—something that’s hard to do with a cluster of printed film frames
versus a full-length film. The common-sense belief would be that the use
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Frames Cinema
of frames Journal context can only increase interest in a film and
in an analytical
make people want to see it.
http://framescinemajournal.com
The SCS report, “Fair Usage Publication of Film Stills,” is available online
. I know that the report has helped many authors get their work including
film frames published without being required to seek unnecessary
permission from copyright holders; some presses, both commercial and
academic, have changed their policies as a result of the report and no
longer require their authors to seek such permission. In the intervening
decades, there has been no court case involving film frames that could set
firm legal guidelines for use usage—probably because a copyright holder
would foresee difficulties in winning such a case. Still, other court cases
involving images and fair use have tended to favor the scholar or
journalist’s right to use such images, as I discuss in “Fair is still fair, and
more so.” This entry quotes a lawyer who deals in intellectual-property
rights; he states unequivocally that the ways in which David and I use
illustrations online should be considered fair use.
No doubt in part because of this ability to use images lavishly, our entries
tended to be longer and more like academic articles than like typical blog
posts. Some run up to around 5000 words, which is the size of a journal
article. Still, they are not exactly like academic articles. They are more
argumentative, analytical, and backed by evidence than typical blog
poses, but we aim them toward a general public. A good student, while
reading Film Art, should be able to go online and understand any entry.
One thing we quickly discovered was that we could not tie our entries
closely to the textbook. It just wasn’t possible to, say, watch and film and
write about the editing in it, hoping that classes using Film Art could use
it as a supplemental example to the editing chapter. To keep up regular
contributions to a blog, we needed to seize upon things that intrigued us,
whether the results related to the textbook or not. Often the entries’
relevance to Film Art, if any, becomes apparent only after we’ve finished
them. So we blog from film festivals; we try to refute debatable claims
made by industry officials or journalistic pundits; we explore technology,
from aspect ratios in Godard’s films to the ups and downs of 3D; and most
of all we analyze films, old and new, formally and stylistically.
We’ve often said that the blog quickly became our own private film
journal, with entries posted as soon as they’re finished and feedback
given in the form of other bloggers and journalists linking to our new
pieces. There’s no waiting a year for the result to appear, as is typical
with print journals. Plus with a service called “StatCounter,” we can see
how many hits we receive on which pages, how many visitors have been
on the site before, how many pages they looked at, how long they stayed,
and what country they “came” from. When you write for a print journal,
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Frames
you sendCinema Journal
an essay out into the world and wonder if anyone is actually
reading it.
http://framescinemajournal.com
A Second Blog
The blog largely focused on the many months when legal difficulties,
MGM’s financial woes (the studio owned the distribution rights to The
Hobbit and is co-producing it), and labor threats and other problems were
delaying the commencement of filming on The Hobbit. I tried to offer
some analysis of news events involving the film industry. Fans tend to
assume the worst. For example, many took the Tolkien Trust’s lawsuit
against New Line Cinema to be a sign that the author’s heirs wanted to
scuttle the Hobbit project. I pointed out that the lawsuit was over money
that was due to the Trust and publisher HarperCollins, stemming from a
condition in the original 1969 film-rights contract sold by Tolkien himself;
the studio was to hand over 7.5% of gross revenues, minus certain
expenses. I also blogged constantly (110 times!) through the 2010 threats
by labor organizations and the subsequent threat by Warner Bros. to take
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Frames Cinemaelsewhere
the production Journal if New Zealand didn’t sweeten the deal with
further government incentives. It was an interesting few years.
http://framescinemajournal.com
The larger Tolkien-related websites have “spies” all over the world,
sending news and tips and photos. I couldn’t match their coverage, but I
did come to have a few spies myself, people in Portugal and Hong Kong
and England who sent me all sorts of links. That’s an interesting
phenomenon of Internet publication. People you don’t know and who
aren’t scholars themselves get in touch and voluntarily help you out, with
links and suggestions and, yes, corrections. By the way, once something
is in print, you can’t do much more than ask for a correction in the next
printing if it’s a book and for an errata note in the next issue if it’s a
journal article. Now we can correct, add to, and otherwise tinker with old
entries.
I kept the Frodo Franchise blog going in the hope that eventually I would
be able to write a follow-up book on the making of The Hobbit. After
years of delays, both in the film’s production and my attempts to solicit
permission to do such a book, it turned out that I almost certainly will not
be allowed to do so. Keeping up a blog takes a lot of time, and I decided
that I would give it up. I suspended it on August 25, 2011. It remains
online, since I hope it provides a useful record of the important events
that happened during the long gap between The Lord of the Rings and
The Hobbit.
His first experiment with putting work online in book form came after his
book Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema went out of print. Noticing that the
University of Michigan Press had launched an online series of out-of-print
English-language books on Japanese cinema, David offered Ozu and the
Poetics of Cinema to them. On the first pass, the book’s pages were
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Frames
scannedCinema Journalinto pdfs. But the result was murky, and the back-
and converted
and-white stills looked ugly. So Abe Markus Nornes, who was working as
http://framescinemajournal.com
the sponsor of the series, persuaded the press to redo the project with
newly-minted stills. Markus used DVDs to generate the color images,
while David rescanned the black-and-white ones from his original
negatives. The result was a very presentable version of the original. Many
people have told him that they were happy to have the book in such
useful and searchable form. (It’s available for free download here.)
This seems to me one of the most promising purposes for online books.
Once a book is in print, it can be put into libraries and other collections
where it is preserved in hard copy. But once it goes out of print, why not
make it available online? These days that usually means a pdf, though no
doubt more sophisticated file programs will soon make online books even
more attractive. My own Exporting Entertainment: America in the World
Film Market 1907-1934 was published by the BFI in 1985 and went out of
print in record time. The BFI was switching American distributors, and as
far as I know, the book never got released in the USA at all. Now it’s
available as a pdf on David’s website. Other books will follow as time
allows.
David has taken this notion a step further. When his Planet Hong Kong
was taken out of print by Harvard University Press, he revised it
extensively into a second edition and began selling it online. With three
new chapters and updating of existing ones, it was significantly different,
and the illustrations reproduced in black and white in the print edition
are all now in glorious color. The book hasn’t sold a huge number of
copies, but the expenses of having it professionally laid out with a new
design have been paid off. A few teachers are assigning it in classes, so it
promises to have long if modest sales. David did want some print copies.
He had several locally printed and bound, which proved handy when
libraries preferred copies to pdfs.
To some extent the online sales of Planet Hong Kong, second edition, in
pdf form has been an experiment in how viable online academic self-
publishing is. David is currently contemplating other online projects of
various sorts, each of which will probably be slightly different in nature:
further experiments along these same lines.
Conclusions
By now David and I have explored several options for online publication,
though we have certainly not exhausted the possibilities. Whether the
blog has really achieved the initial goal of having an impact on the sales
of Film Art is difficult to judge. One of our reviewers who commented on
the ninth edition said he or she discovered the book through the blog and
adopted it, which of course is gratifying. Some teachers do use the blog
in their classes, assigning individual entries or simply drawing upon
material for their lectures. We have no way of gauging how widespread
such usage is.
Whether or not the blog significantly promotes Film Art and our other
books, we are committed to continuing it. Given that we launched
Observations on Film Art shortly after David’s retirement, for him it
provides somewhat the same sort of professional satisfaction that
teaching previously had. It has allowed us to write prose that is a blend of
the academic and journalistic: substantive and yet accessible to non-
specialist readers. We can be topical in ways impossible in the world of
printed academic journals, where getting an article into print can take a
year or more. With one or the other of us posting something every week
on average, we seldom do the sort of intense research necessary for a
refereed print article, and yet it has turned out to be remarkable how
much substantive material one can bring together in a piece written in a
day or two, or even an afternoon.
Copyright:
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