Enjoy fast, FREE delivery, exclusive deals and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime
Try Prime
and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Instant streaming of thousands of movies and TV episodes with Prime Video
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Buy new:
$29.95$29.95
FREE delivery: Wednesday, Oct 18 on orders over $35.00 shipped by Amazon.
Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com
Buy used: $25.05
Other Sellers on Amazon
+ $3.99 shipping
85% positive over last 12 months
Usually ships within 4 to 5 days.
+ $3.99 shipping
90% positive over last 12 months
Usually ships within 3 to 4 days.
+ $3.99 shipping
85% positive over last 12 months
Usually ships within 2 to 3 days.
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
The Age of Movies: Selected Writings of Pauline Kael: A Library of America Special Publication Paperback – September 27, 2016
| Price | New from | Used from |
Purchase options and add-ons
“Film criticism is exciting just because there is no formula to apply,” Pauline Kael once observed, “just because you must use everything you are and everything you know.” Between 1968 and 1991, as regular film reviewer for The New Yorker, Kael used those formidable tools to shape the tastes of a generation. She had a gift for capturing, with force and fluency, the essence of an actor’s gesture or the full implication of a cinematic image. Kael called movies “the most total and encompassing art form we have,” and her reviews became a platform for considering both film and the worlds it engages, crafting in the process a prose style of extraordinary wit, precision, and improvisatory grace.
Her ability to evoke the essence of a great artist—an Orson Welles or a Robert Altman—or to celebrate the way even seeming trash could tap deeply into our emotions was matched by her unwavering eye for the scams and self-deceptions of a corrupt movie industry. Here are her appraisals of era-defining films such as Breathless, Bonnie and Clyde, The Leopard, The Godfather, Last Tango in Paris, Nashville, along with many others, some awaiting rediscovery—all providing the occasion for masterpieces of observation and insight, alive on every page.
- Print length864 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLibrary of America
- Publication dateSeptember 27, 2016
- Dimensions6.02 x 1.42 x 9.21 inches
- ISBN-101598535080
- ISBN-13978-1598535082
The Amazon Book Review
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Frequently bought together

Similar items that may ship from close to you
Editorial Reviews
Review
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Library of America; Reprint edition (September 27, 2016)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 864 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1598535080
- ISBN-13 : 978-1598535082
- Item Weight : 2.05 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.02 x 1.42 x 9.21 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #227,187 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #69 in Movie Guides & Reviews
- #155 in Journalism Writing Reference (Books)
- #263 in Movie History & Criticism
- Customer Reviews:
Important information
To report an issue with this product, click here.
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviews with images
Submit a report
- Harassment, profanity
- Spam, advertisement, promotions
- Given in exchange for cash, discounts
Sorry, there was an error
Please try again later.-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
I once wrote Pauline Kael a letter asking her to read a screenplay of mine, which I wrote as a graduate film student. She responded with the kind of typical Kaelian breeziness which was so characteristic of her work. “Send it Along,” she wrote. (Would make a good song title for Madonna (i.e “ Open Your Heart,” or “True Blue.” Pauline Kael, like Madonna had/has perfect pitch. Who else would have titled an essay on “The Unbearable Lightness of Being” with this demand: “Take Off Your Clothes.” (Another good song title for Madonna.)
A year later the verdict came back. “I think this would be a good one to forget about,” Kael wrote. pulling her punches as usual, rather like Madonna did when she delivered a sour opinion of Kevin Costner in “Truth or Dare.”
“Your letters have a voice; the script doesen’t. I suspect it is too far away from you.”
She got it half right. The script wasn’t too far away from me. I was too far away from it. It was an uneasy mixture of high-mindedness and bile. It was truthful in its way, but it didn’t express what I was trying to say.
“Don’t get sore at me,” Kael closed her short note with.
At around the same time (1980) a fellow New Yorker critic, Renata Adler, writing in the New York Review of Books, took it upon herself to bring Pauline Kael, one of the most important voices in cultural criticism, ( in jacket copy she had been compared to George Bernard Shaw) to her knees.
Adler blew this trumpet several paragraphs into her essay: “The Sad Tale of Pauline Kael.” “When the Lights Go Down,” Kael’s twelfth collection of movie reviews) “is piece by piece, line by line and without interruption worthless.”
No kidding?
How about the first line of the first essay in “When the Lights Go Down:” “In the Man From Dream City,” Kael opened with “You can be had,” Mae West said to Cary Grant in “She Done Him Wrong.” And that’s what the female stars of the 30’s and 40’s were saying to him for decades, as he backed away, but not too far.”
This very astute summary of Cary Grant’s appeal is not only not “worthless,” it is a prime example of Pauline Kael’s ability to capture very quickly an actor’s personality and bearing.
In her unprecedented attack on Pauline Kael, Renata Adler ignored most of what is in “When the Lights Go Down,” built herself a sandbag of references to reviews which are not even in the book, (i.e. “Last Tango in Paris,” which is collected in “Reeling,”) Adler’s literary apparatus reduced a great critic’s taste to little more than something she could declare was insignificant and politically correct.
In calling Kael a “vulgarian” Adler knew she was on to something — how to spread a little “shame on you” on Kael and her legion of fans. (Adler’s literary persona is sexual repression.) Every line of her critique was accompanied by a “gotcha.” Here’s one: “There are in principle three things that she (Kael) likes: “ fantasies of subjugation by apes, pods and extraterrestrials” (blind references to the remake of “King Kong,” “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” and Steven Spielberg’s “ET”) — reviews which are at least in the book under so much and so little scrutiny. With the exception of the Dino Delaurentis remake, which I would like to revisit (It was Jessica Lange first movie) all the movies referenced are great, some of them beloved. So what was Adler’s problem with Kael’s raves? There wasn’t one. She had no case.
Adler just likes to feel superior to popular culture. Her credentials amounted (and continue to amount) to very little: an occasional piece for The New Yorker, a six month stint as a reviewer for the New York Times, a job she proudly quit,and a handful of short novels. (A typical Kael review is longer than a novel by Adler.)
There is something marvelous going on here despite the fact that everything Adler said about Kael was wrong. Her prose is both ridiculously airbrushed and transcendently structured to deceive. Suddenly it becomes immoral and somehow manages the trick of not letting Adler in on her own joke. Try this on: “The sadism in Ms. Kael’s work is unique in expository prose (as opposed to declamatiory prose?) so far as I know.” Let me stop her right there. She doesn’t know enough. The Marquis DeSade? Ann Rice?
Let’s cite one more backhanded quote from Pauline Kael, used by Adler. “For Paul Schrader to call himself a whore would be vanity. He doesn’t know how to turn a trick.” Adler calls this statement “a breakthrough in vulgarity and unfairness.”
On the quote in question, Adler almost has a point. This sentiment bothered me too, particularly because Shraeder and Kael had once been friends. But Kael loved these kind of wisecracks. She was a bawd, like Chaucer, Shakespeare, the silent film star Fatty Arbuckle, Bob Hope, Mae West and Madonna. Bet Adler doesn’t much care for Madonna.
Adler despises pop culture, can’t discern the mix of high and low that Kael spotted so early. Adler basically has nothing to offer anyone except moral superiority and contempt — which are the same thing.
Adler claims that this piece, published 25 years ago, and still the most famous thing she has ever done, destroyed her career at the New Yorker. This is a little hard to take seriously, considering that Adler’s opinion of Pauline Kael was shared by William Shawn, the editor of the New Yorker for a storied half century, who had legendary battles with Kael over language and her refusal to reform or even change a line. Adler has republished this essay as an e-book and retitled it “The Story of Pauline Kael.” It comes a lot closer to being “The Story of Renata Adler.”
By example, if not by design, Pauline Kael taught readers how to really look at movies; how to think for themselves; and to outgrow her and move on. Her kindness backfired. In her New York Times obituary, the headline, which should have been about a distinguished career, was trumped by the widely-held observation that she had a great deal of influence over other writers. (Why is this bad? Kael complained in an interview.)
Kael had many devotees among would-be critics, who were drawn by her funny and trenchant insights and her lollipops and ice cream prose. They sought her out and became successful in their own rights. She was famous for getting the ones she liked movie reviewing gigs. The clan began to be mocked as “the Paulette’s” specifically by James Wolcott in Vanity Fair in a rearguard action intended to insulate him from the obvious fact that he was one too.
Adler seized on this as evidence of a conspiracy. In fact, Adler has a law degree but doesn’t practice. What she does instead is to utilize the trial lawyer’s sneering innuendo to work herself into a composed frenzy.
Kael was the first critic to declare that the energy in trash had value: that a good movie came from the clash of art and popular ideas. She then reversed herself late in her career when it became obvious that trash had won the day. (One could say that by 2018 it had become a technical knockout.) What would Kael have to say about today’s movies. I don’t think she would like them. The last line of her famous essay, “Trash, Art and the Movies,” was “Trash has given us an appetite for art.” It was a prescient thought for the time — in the late sixties and early seventies — until the advent of “Jaws,” by a director she liked, and then by George Lucas, more of a producer than a director, whom she disliked, changed everything about how movies got made and marketed.
Pauline Kael published her first essay, a pan of Charlie Chaplin’s “Limelight, in 1958. Her last review, a lukewarm appreciation of Steve Martin’s “LA Story” ran in the New Yorker in 2001. She died a decade later on September 11, 2011 at the age of 91. Her work is fully deserving of respect and after a period of dormancy is undergoing a revival.
Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2018
I once wrote Pauline Kael a letter asking her to read a screenplay of mine, which I wrote as a graduate film student. She responded with the kind of typical Kaelian breeziness which was so characteristic of her work. “Send it Along,” she wrote. (Would make a good song title for Madonna (i.e “ Open Your Heart,” or “True Blue.” Pauline Kael, like Madonna had/has perfect pitch. Who else would have titled an essay on “The Unbearable Lightness of Being” with this demand: “Take Off Your Clothes.” (Another good song title for Madonna.)
A year later the verdict came back. “I think this would be a good one to forget about,” Kael wrote. pulling her punches as usual, rather like Madonna did when she delivered a sour opinion of Kevin Costner in “Truth or Dare.”
“Your letters have a voice; the script doesen’t. I suspect it is too far away from you.”
She got it half right. The script wasn’t too far away from me. I was too far away from it. It was an uneasy mixture of high-mindedness and bile. It was truthful in its way, but it didn’t express what I was trying to say.
“Don’t get sore at me,” Kael closed her short note with.
At around the same time (1980) a fellow New Yorker critic, Renata Adler, writing in the New York Review of Books, took it upon herself to bring Pauline Kael, one of the most important voices in cultural criticism, ( in jacket copy she had been compared to George Bernard Shaw) to her knees.
Adler blew this trumpet several paragraphs into her essay: “The Sad Tale of Pauline Kael.” “When the Lights Go Down,” Kael’s twelfth collection of movie reviews) “is piece by piece, line by line and without interruption worthless.”
No kidding?
How about the first line of the first essay in “When the Lights Go Down:” “In the Man From Dream City,” Kael opened with “You can be had,” Mae West said to Cary Grant in “She Done Him Wrong.” And that’s what the female stars of the 30’s and 40’s were saying to him for decades, as he backed away, but not too far.”
This very astute summary of Cary Grant’s appeal is not only not “worthless,” it is a prime example of Pauline Kael’s ability to capture very quickly an actor’s personality and bearing.
In her unprecedented attack on Pauline Kael, Renata Adler ignored most of what is in “When the Lights Go Down,” built herself a sandbag of references to reviews which are not even in the book, (i.e. “Last Tango in Paris,” which is collected in “Reeling,”) Adler’s literary apparatus reduced a great critic’s taste to little more than something she could declare was insignificant and politically correct.
In calling Kael a “vulgarian” Adler knew she was on to something — how to spread a little “shame on you” on Kael and her legion of fans. (Adler’s literary persona is sexual repression.) Every line of her critique was accompanied by a “gotcha.” Here’s one: “There are in principle three things that she (Kael) likes: “ fantasies of subjugation by apes, pods and extraterrestrials” (blind references to the remake of “King Kong,” “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” and Steven Spielberg’s “ET”) — reviews which are at least in the book under so much and so little scrutiny. With the exception of the Dino Delaurentis remake, which I would like to revisit (It was Jessica Lange first movie) all the movies referenced are great, some of them beloved. So what was Adler’s problem with Kael’s raves? There wasn’t one. She had no case.
Adler just likes to feel superior to popular culture. Her credentials amounted (and continue to amount) to very little: an occasional piece for The New Yorker, a six month stint as a reviewer for the New York Times, a job she proudly quit,and a handful of short novels. (A typical Kael review is longer than a novel by Adler.)
There is something marvelous going on here despite the fact that everything Adler said about Kael was wrong. Her prose is both ridiculously airbrushed and transcendently structured to deceive. Suddenly it becomes immoral and somehow manages the trick of not letting Adler in on her own joke. Try this on: “The sadism in Ms. Kael’s work is unique in expository prose (as opposed to declamatiory prose?) so far as I know.” Let me stop her right there. She doesn’t know enough. The Marquis DeSade? Ann Rice?
Let’s cite one more backhanded quote from Pauline Kael, used by Adler. “For Paul Schrader to call himself a whore would be vanity. He doesn’t know how to turn a trick.” Adler calls this statement “a breakthrough in vulgarity and unfairness.”
On the quote in question, Adler almost has a point. This sentiment bothered me too, particularly because Shraeder and Kael had once been friends. But Kael loved these kind of wisecracks. She was a bawd, like Chaucer, Shakespeare, the silent film star Fatty Arbuckle, Bob Hope, Mae West and Madonna. Bet Adler doesn’t much care for Madonna.
Adler despises pop culture, can’t discern the mix of high and low that Kael spotted so early. Adler basically has nothing to offer anyone except moral superiority and contempt — which are the same thing.
Adler claims that this piece, published 25 years ago, and still the most famous thing she has ever done, destroyed her career at the New Yorker. This is a little hard to take seriously, considering that Adler’s opinion of Pauline Kael was shared by William Shawn, the editor of the New Yorker for a storied half century, who had legendary battles with Kael over language and her refusal to reform or even change a line. Adler has republished this essay as an e-book and retitled it “The Story of Pauline Kael.” It comes a lot closer to being “The Story of Renata Adler.”
By example, if not by design, Pauline Kael taught readers how to really look at movies; how to think for themselves; and to outgrow her and move on. Her kindness backfired. In her New York Times obituary, the headline, which should have been about a distinguished career, was trumped by the widely-held observation that she had a great deal of influence over other writers. (Why is this bad? Kael complained in an interview.)
Kael had many devotees among would-be critics, who were drawn by her funny and trenchant insights and her lollipops and ice cream prose. They sought her out and became successful in their own rights. She was famous for getting the ones she liked movie reviewing gigs. The clan began to be mocked as “the Paulette’s” specifically by James Wolcott in Vanity Fair in a rearguard action intended to insulate him from the obvious fact that he was one too.
Adler seized on this as evidence of a conspiracy. In fact, Adler has a law degree but doesn’t practice. What she does instead is to utilize the trial lawyer’s sneering innuendo to work herself into a composed frenzy.
Kael was the first critic to declare that the energy in trash had value: that a good movie came from the clash of art and popular ideas. She then reversed herself late in her career when it became obvious that trash had won the day. (One could say that by 2018 it had become a technical knockout.) What would Kael have to say about today’s movies. I don’t think she would like them. The last line of her famous essay, “Trash, Art and the Movies,” was “Trash has given us an appetite for art.” It was a prescient thought for the time — in the late sixties and early seventies — until the advent of “Jaws,” by a director she liked, and then by George Lucas, more of a producer than a director, whom she disliked, changed everything about how movies got made and marketed.
Pauline Kael published her first essay, a pan of Charlie Chaplin’s “Limelight, in 1958. Her last review, a lukewarm appreciation of Steve Martin’s “LA Story” ran in the New Yorker in 2001. She died a decade later on September 11, 2011 at the age of 91. Her work is fully deserving of respect and after a period of dormancy is undergoing a revival.
The book is a compendium of excerpts of books she has written about films and critical essays on many important films. Among the books this volume borrows from are: I Lost It at the Movies, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, Going Steady, Deeper into the Movies, Reeling, When the Lights Go Down, Taking it All In, State of the Art, and Movie Love. This prolific writer of movie criticism analyzes films using her knowledge of society, culture, and economics, as well as literary works that are the basis for movies. She prefers movies that offer meaning over movies that are simply spectacular; she raises her brows toward possible hidden messages that directors may send through their choices; she suspects the mass culture that inhibits individuality and that often controls the messages or lack of messages in films.
Her views on many films may be controversial, but well-reasoned. This text also includes her views of many American and foreign classic films; a short bio of Cary Grant, an actor she admired so much, a Norman Mailer book on Marilyn Monroe; and a critique on a book about Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, among other things. It is pity that she isn't around anymore. In my book, she is THE CRITIC. Great book.
The Kindle edition is quite helpful because it provides an interactive Table of Contents that allows you to go back and forth into the text.










