livelove wrote:Hello everyone...I want to rate films correctly. Because I want criticker to work and also because I want to find out - by way of critically questioning myself - how much I really like a given film. Therefore I am from time to time pondering questions about how I should rate films.
I wanted to share my thoughts, expecting or hoping to find like-minded souls here on criticker, given that this is a rating platform, no less. In hopes of triggering a discussion that would enlighten me, I posted 2 threads on that subject...
But the reaction mostly varied between non-existent and indifferent (with a few exceptions maybe).
Or at least I didn't quite have the impression that responders cared all that much about this type of questions.
Nevertheless, I'd like to try one more time.
This time, I want to ask for your opinion on the following question:
On what basis do you rate films ?
On the basis of how much you liked the film ?
Or on the basis of how "good" you find a film ?
... or on another basis altogether ?
For lots of films this distinction (likeability vs goodness/quality) might be moot.
I think this is an interesting topic and something I think about probably more often than I should. I wrote about my personal rating system
here, and that system is pretty much what I still use now and will probably continue to use.
What I didn't mention in that post is that my default score for a movie is 5 out of 10. I don't rate a movie unless I watch it to the end. If I watch a movie and it doesn't earn or lose any points from me, I would probably rate it a 5 which is just decent. Some genres have a default score of 4 though, like love stories, musicals, most common types of horror and thrillers, and b movies. Since I don't like most love stories, most will lose at least one point during the viewing, if not more. Same with musicals and horror. I generally like b movies despite them sucking, which is why it's pretty easy for them to stay at a 4.
This is all purely based on how much I liked it, and not based on how "good" I recognize it as. The reason being is that recognizing how good it is is already built into my rating. For your example below (which I haven't seen) that you said you'd give a 6/10, if I watched it and had the same opinion of it as you did, I would rate it a 6/10. The reason is because if that movie is the best of its kind, then any others like it I see will be a 5 or 4 or 3 etc. In this case, 6 would be the top score for that type of movie.
If you say, "well what if another movie of that type comes along that is somehow actually better than the 6/10 was? What if this new movie is a 7/10?" Then I was wrong about 6/10 being the ceiling, and the ceiling is actually 7. So recognizing "good" movies despite not liking them is built into my system. I don't care for most "thriller movies with a more modern horror tone" like It Follows, but I think It Follows is about as good as it gets for that type of movie (so good that I actually loved it), so I'd rate it 8/10. Horror in general isn't something I think is all that great, so 8 is probably the ceiling. Previously I thought 7 was the horror ceiling, which is what I rated the original Nightmare on Elm Street due to its great pacing, great practical effects, length, character decisions that weren't super dumb like most horror, and mostly likeable characters. I don't like horror (I bet most horror movies get a 3 from me, or else a 2 or 4), but I thought it hit all the high notes so I gave it a 7 which is way higher than I give to most horror. That's how recognizing it's "goodness" is built in. Now 8 is the ceiling with It Follows.
livelove wrote:But there are films, for which I really grapple with this distinction.
For example, I consider the film
"Eine verhängnisvolle Nacht" nearly "perfect" in the sense that it perfectly captures the terror of a woman stalked by an obsessive man. I think if you want to make a film about this subject, it's almost impossible to do any better than that. So as far as film-making craftsmanship is concerned, I would rate the film
10/10.
Now, how much did I like/enjoy the film ?
I think it's hard to enjoy a film full of such misery as much as you would enjoy a good comedy.
If I purely had to rate the film on the basis of "how much did I like the film", I would rate it
6/10.
Up until now, I forced myself to solely vote on how much I liked a given film, regardless of how "well" it was made. And in many cases, these 2 criteria align anyway.
But when I see a film like the example above, it gives me heartache to rate a film in the vicinity of e.g.
6/10 when it is a fine piece of cinematic art, especially when I think of the idea, that I will very probably not like/enjoy *any* film on that subject. After all, the subject on its own should not determine a film's rating ...
... or should it ?
A simpler example:
How should someone deal with a film of a particular genre, he/she generally dislikes (e.g. horror movie), when he/she recognizes that this particular film is of very good quality or even flawless (except only for the "wrong" genre) ? When he/she dislikes the horror genre generally, should he/she rate an otherwise flawless movie at a score of
0-2 /10 ?
If it's a flawless horror movie is it really a 2/10? I mean what's flawless about it? I have a hard time believing there is a horror movie you think is flawless but liked it only as much as 2/10. Do you have any specific examples that are so extreme? If not, what's the most extreme example you can think of?
livelove wrote:Or maybe an even better example:
What about a heartbroken person, who after his/her relationship of 10 years just broke apart, suffers from lovesickness and temporarily hates romantic films, although this is normally his/her favourite genre ? Tastes can change/fluctuate, sometimes only temporarily, sometimes for forever ...
So maybe he/she hates a film, he/she would otherwise like ...
... should he/she now give this film a dismal score ?
Hard for me to respond to this part since I am about as emotionally stable as is possible. Best guess is that I'd try to guess how much I would have liked it despite whatever emotional instability I'm experiencing at the time. If that doesn't work, I'd rate it then just make a note to rerate it in a few months.
Doing anything else would seem like just accepting an inaccurate score, right?
livelove wrote:The reverse might also occur, by the way.
There are some bad films, I enjoy watching.
So should I give a bad score, or a good one ?
For example I find
3 coeurs a bad film (incredibly stupid story [spoilers ahead!]: man encounters completely unknown female in a big town, misses next RDV, then - out of pure chance - encounters her sister and marries her unbeknownly [if that's the right word]) ... I kept thinking "oh, what an awful story" while simultaneously wanting to know how the story unfolds/ends.
B movies start off as a default of 4 to me. Some actually do earn higher. For example, you hear all the time someone calling a movie so bad it's good. For the longest time I never found a movie I genuinely thought it was so bad it's good. Then I saw Miami Connection. For me, it's the absolute best so bad it's good movie I've ever seen. It knocks everything else out of the park. To be clear, the movie sucks hard. If I were to rate it "more objectively" then it's like a 2/10 at best, maybe even a 1. But I love it for what it is so I rated it a 7. It's the best there is at what it is, an unintentionally hilariously badly made movie. I just really enjoy it. There are many B movies that are just enjoyable and deserve a good score, like Hard Ticket to Hawaii and Samurai Cop. Objectively they are completely shit, but I want to watch more that are as good-in-a-bad-way as they are.
I haven't seen 3 Coeurs, but I have an example of a TV show I didn't like but that I wanted to keep watching - Breaking Bad. Everything about it was great (production, dialogue, exciting cliff hangers, realism for the most part, etc) except I hated the characters. They just weren't likeable characters, and likeable characters are important to me. I can't enjoy most 2 hour movies if they don't have likeable characters, much less a 48 hour long TV series. Someone might argue, "But that's the point, just like Tony Montana - you're not supposed to like him!" Okay, sure, and maybe a 2 hour movie can get away with me not liking the main character(s) since it's only 2 hours. But 48 hours long? I better like them. But I watched the whole show for all the reasons I mentioned above plus I didn't know if I was going to begin to like the characters in later seasons, and it's a popular show many have seen so now I can talk about it, plus I hate spoilers and didn't want it to be ruined for me. I didn't like the show but I watched the whole thing, and I'd still rate it poorly compared to other TV shows because of how much I hate unlikable characters.
livelove wrote:Rating is not all that easy, when you really think about it a bit more in depth.
Maybe you will find better examples than me. I am not the best in picking examples.
By picking those examples, I just want to show that IMO how much I like/enjoy a film does not necessarily correspond with "how good" I find it ...
... which makes me unsure what the basis for my vote really should be.
What about "artsy" films, which I (myself) recognize as artistic, but when I can't find any pleasure in watching the film. Should I give 0 points ?
I do recognize a few exceptions to everything I wrote above, where I will rate a movie highly even though I didn't technically enjoy it, when it's justified. The best example I can think of is the movie Salo, or the 120 Days of Sodom. This is a movie that was not made for entertainment in any traditional sense of the word. It's not there to enjoy. It's a story with a message. It delivers the message regardless of how hard a pill it is to swallow. The message for most people will provoke a negative response, such as feeling depressed or sick to your stomach or further desensitized to all the harsh realities of the world. If I would rate it on entertainmen/enjoyment alone I would give it a low score. But it's an exception. I rated it based on what it was trying to accomplish (eg how valuable is the message to me? to society?), how well it succeeded in that, and how well produced the movie was from a technical standpoint. For Salo, I feel like what I got out of it was valuable to my development as a person and to my perspective on the world, so therefore the movie accomplished it's goal, and it was well produced at the same time. It did all this in what I would call a masterful way. I haven't seen many similar movies come close to doing what it did so masterfully, so because of all that I think it deserves a high score. It's not a movie that can be liked in any traditional sense, but I did like what it was trying to be and say and accomplish and I liked the production, and so it got an 8 out of 10 from me.
A second example of exceptions would be art house movies that also aren't trying to be purely enjoyable or entertainment but that have a purpose I like as well. These would be movies that aren't necessarily unpleasant like Salo, but just don't go out of their way to provide pure uncut entertainment like most Hollywood movies. Like Andrei Rublev. Great movie, but long and kind of slow.
I'm sure there are other types of exceptions I could think of, but the running theme here is that I like
for some reason or another all movies I rate highly. I may not have been entertained, I may not have enjoyed the movie in a normal way, but I liked it somehow. If I don't like it in some worthwhile way, then I rate it poorly, no matter how much I can recognize it being a good movie otherwise.
livelove wrote:Or what about films, that are excellently made, but are extremely hard to watch, e.g. films which spend a good amount of time showing physical/sexual abuse, torture or sheer terror (like the stalker victim mentioned above feels). Examples are
aplenty.
I also don't know how to rate excellent films, which trigger a strong flow of emotions inside me, but which make me feel depressed, e.g.
Requiem for a dream. Since it makes me feel bad, I somehow "dislike" the film (
0/10) but at the very same time, I think it's a good film (
7/10) ... what gives? Should I thus choose the average of
3,5 ?
If I shared your opinion of Requiem for a Dream, I'd start at my default score of 5 then probably give it 1 or 2 points for being technically well made then minus a ton of points (like 5 points) for disliking it so much, resulting in a very low score. 5+2-5=final score 2. I don't see how the average would be accurate. Either you liked it or you didn't. It's quite possible to dislike well made movies. There are plenty of good movies I don't like. I don't like the Godfather movies that much. La La Land is a another great example for me...well made but I don't like love stories, musicals, or Hollywood circlejerks, so I'd give it a 4/10 despite it having a generally very high quality production.
If I want Criticker to give accurate recommendations, I have to rate them based on how well I liked them, otherwise I'll be getting recommendations for "good movies" I may not like rather than getting recommendations for just movies I should like. How "good" they are is irrelevant to me. I want to watch movies I'm most likely to like. This is what the engine is designed for.
livelove wrote:I don't always find it difficult to rate films.
But some films I find very difficult to rate ...
What are your thoughts (generally speaking as well as on these specific examples) ?
What are your guidelines when you rate films ?
Thanks for the topic.