5001 Nights at the Movies: A Guide from A to Z, first published in 1982,[1] is a book compiling passages of film critic Pauline Kael's reviews from the silent era to the early 1980s.[2] They were originally written for The New Yorker’s 'Goings On About Town' section.[3]
Summary
In her regular New Yorker column Kael wrote long, thoughtful critiques of the latest films. 5001 Nights is made up of abbreviated reviews of those longer articles and capsule critiques of dozens of other movies made throughout the 20th century in a single paragraph.[4]
Kael recaps American and international films; her reviews often contain a phrase that captures a film’s essence.[5]
Excerpts
In a Lonely Place: "an atmospheric but disappointingly hollow murder melodrama"
Rebel Without a Cause: "had more emotional resonance for the teenagers of the time than many much better movies"
Written on the Wind: "his talent for whipping up sour, stylized soap operas in posh settings"
The Tarnished Angels: "the kind of bad movie that you know is bad-and yet you're held by the mixture of polished style and quasi-melodramatics achieved by the director, Douglas Sirk"
Gun Crazy: "In its B-movie way, it has a fascinating crumminess"
^Yorker, The New (October 17, 2011). "Pauline Kael's Canon Fodder". Archived from the original on September 25, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2019 – via www.newyorker.com.