Is TV an art form?

On Tuesday, I did a review of my limited experiences at the Montclair Film Festival.  One thing that I noticed, especially in Michael Moore’s discussion, was that film makers tend to consider TV negatively.  “Small wonder!” you might say.  But books certainly are transformed to TV as much or more than they are to the big screen.  If literature is an art form, are things derived from it also art forms?  Most people associated with the film industry would say films are an art form.  So, is TV an art form?

Michael Moore focused on the active-passive difference, claiming that TV is much more passive than cinema.  The latter has an audience that moves to some building, maybe miles away, buys their tickets, and sits down to enjoy a film (that’s a bit myopic, of course, in these days of Netflix).  TV takes away everything except maybe enjoying the film, but many of us watch anything to just be watching something.  I don’t buy the argument.  Both are passive and demand less mental interaction with their viewers than a good book demands of its reader.

There are exceptions.  Take the film Memento, directed by Christopher Nolan, who also wrote the screenplay based on the short story “Memento Mori,” by Jonathan Nolan.  If you survived this film—in other words, you were able to figure it out—you certainly deserve an A+ in movie viewing.  Screenwriters can write wildly complex stuff—I know people (myself included) who are still trying to figure out the last episodes of Lost.  Here we have the example of a movie and a TV show that, at the very least, caused many viewers to interact mentally, although they might have thrown up their hands and admit defeat.

A good book, however, bends the mind better than any film.  I argued in that previous post that a good author will leave enough room for the reader’s imagination to go to work—in other words, involve the reader in the creative process.  Films and TV shows, while entertaining, can’t hope to do this—the reader is spoon fed, visually and aurally, and cannot create.  He can react—laughter, tears, feelings—but the film or TV show is creating that in him.  I suppose you could say that everyone reacts differently, but it’s still true we don’t create with TV or film.  I imagined how James Bond appeared and what he was like as a person when I started reading Ian Fleming in junior high.  I accepted Sean Connery in the role because he came close to what my imagination had wrought.  Roger Moore (no relation) and other cinematic Bonds that followed never did.

That begs the question of the title.  They say film is an art form, so is TV?  For art works—sculptures, paintings, defecated matter (whatever serves for art these days)—the viewer is still passive, i.e. not creating.  So maybe not involving the viewer defines art and books aren’t an art form?  I will leave these weighty issues, forget about the comparisons between art, film, TV, and books, and just stick to the question of the title.  I’m sure I’m going to get into trouble, but here goes.

TV is not art.  Neither is film.  Not anywhere near it.  The best of TV derives from the best of film and literature, and so does film if I count screenplays as literature.  Ever ask yourself why the original Star Trek was so much better than its successors, even though they had all the glitzy special effects?  The answer is easy.  The majority of the original Star Trek’s episodes were derived either from stories written by honest-to-gosh sci-fi authors or screenplays written by them.  They knew sci-fi.  The same holds for almost all the Twilight Zone episodes.  The present generation of Hollywood writers doesn’t know sci-fi in the way those old masters did.  In fact, they’re pretty pathetic if you consider series like Lost, Babylon Five, or Battlestar Galactica—if the series was at all saved, it was due to good acting (on the other hand, the acting on the original Star Trek was pathetic).

These ideas work in film too.  I mentioned Blade Runner in that MFF post.  You can count many other Hollywood movies made from Phillip K. Dick stories.  Modern sci-fi films, including Cameron’s Avatar, just can’t compete because the story sucks—all the gee-whiz special effects with blue aliens with tails couldn’t save this film, nor the 3D.  There just isn’t much of a story.  I was more impressed by a documentary on the International Space Station and the 3D effect of an astronaut flipping a pea toward me—now there’s a story.

You know I’m not talking about fiction v. non-fiction either.  I write fiction and I mostly read fiction.  The stories I write and read are far superior than anything I can see on a movie screen or view on TV.  The art is in the literature or even the screenplay.  I don’t know why.  Maybe I’m obsessed with story, but if it isn’t in the screenplay, it’s not going to be present on any size screen.  That’s a fact of nature, something like Newton’s laws.

Outside of sci-fi, the only TV series that captured the literary nuances was Murder She Wrote.  You might say, “What about all those PBS murder mystery series borrowed from the BBC?”  I’m talking original TV here, not a bunch of British actors bringing famous stories to life (sure they do it well, but that just adds to the argument that TV is not the art, it’s literature).  It engaged the mind.  Unlike Columbo or some other series touted as classic TV crime drama, Murder She Wrote offered the viewer a mystery he had to solve every week.  Sure, you could wait until the denouement (just like you can read the end of an Agatha Christie novel)—you have to want to engage your mind.

No, TV is not an art form.  The art comes from the written word.  Same for cinema.  They’re entertainment.  In the rash of “reality shows” that have nothing to do with any kind of reality, even Dancing with the Stars, or in the “summer blockbuster” special effects movies Hollywood will badger you with during the next months, you will find nothing that makes your mind create.  In fact, if you watch enough, you just might turn your mind to mush.  Caveat emptor!

In libris libertas….

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6 Responses to “Is TV an art form?”

  1. Scott Says:

    I don’t know that I agree fully with that assessment. I agree that both TV and film are (or can be) derivative, and not everything that is tossed up on the screen is “art” but I think that still, both ARE forms of art. Long ago in college I took a film studies course and the format (following the text written by the Jesuit professor) was to study individual directors and watch their films and see subtle things that they were trying to convey. We studied a lot of Hitchcock and Kubrick, but went further back with Zinneman and Hawks and Huston and other great directors, and I saw art in what they put up there on the screen, the marriage of images, story, sound, and acting, put together into something more than the sum of the parts.

  2. steve Says:

    Hi Scott,
    Thanks for your comments. I’m expecting many more people to voice contrary opinions. It’s a controversial subject!
    It might depend on the period. The directors you mentioned might be called “classics.” I sat in on a similar course–there was a clear distinction between “present-day” and classic movies. The original Star Trek and Twilight Zones are classics. But our present present-day output from TV and Hollywood leaves me cold. Blade Runner (rather, Phillip K. Dick) was the bel’arte of sci-fi and statement about the “evil corporation.” Ridley Scott ran that into the ground with Alien, Aliens, and Prometheus–we didn’t need Cameron’s version (Avatar).
    For me, the best film ever made was High Noon–that opinion is all the more notable because I don’t like westerns in general. So much present stuff is just cliche.
    Take care,
    r/Steve
    PS. Thanks for the reviews. Every review helps.

  3. Scott Says:

    If what you are arguing is that many new films and TV shows don’t qualify as “art” by your standards, I’d agree – many of them don’t qualify as art by my standards either.

    I would just say that film and TV can be art, and have been art, in many cases.

    The Shining was an interesting example. Many King fans didn’t care for the movie at all; it wasn’t all that faithful to the book and seemed to change King’s story too much. I always wanted a movie of King’s THE SHINING (and maybe one has been made – do I recall a miniseries? Maybe not…) but after taking that class and learning something about Kubrick’s themes that are found in so many of his movies, I realized that the film was NOT strictly a film version of King’s great horror story, but was a Kubrick film based on the King novel. I got a whole new appreciation for the film (and for the novel as well) from that realization (which came from that class)…

  4. steve Says:

    Ah, The Shining…I’m not sure it would have been so great without the inimitable Jack Nicholson. He also took the bland Witches vehicle and made it a great one too–at least for belly laughs. You reinforced one of my points, though. I don’t like King, but I liked the movie The Shining. (I generally don’t like horror stories, although some people have told me that my “The Bridge” is a great horror story.) Sometimes a good screenplay, good directing, and good acting turn a book that I don’t like into something great.
    There’s another phenomenon that goes on too. For I, Robot, I prepared myself. I told myself, “Will Smith is a great actor. Forget that Asimov also wrote something called I, Robot. Just go and enjoy the movie.” I did. Not a great movie, but fun.
    I guess what we can pretty much agree on is that cinema, TV, and books are all different media.
    What about the passive v. active stuff Michael Moore was harping on?

  5. Scott Says:

    Well, there’s a qualitative difference between TV- and theater-viewing…in the theater I think people are more “invested” in what they are watching. Less distractions, sound is much more impactful, everyone around you (generally) are focused on the screen. But from there, with big screens and surround sound and ease of access of movies vs watching television programming, I think there is far less difference between the two than there ever was before. As far as active vs passive due to people having to move themselves to a different location, I’m not sure that qualifies as “active”. I agree with you that in cinema, the director has control over how you see something, and while perhaps the author has some control, it’s FAR less. Our imaginations take us in whatever direction we want to. (For example, I have my own mental pictures of Rollie and Dao Ming after finishing ANGELS last night, and I wonder if they match anyone else’s, including your own…)

    There’s something to be said for leaving that room for the consumer of the art to maneuver in, I think.

  6. steve Says:

    Your last line is good advice for ALL WRITERS and very much a part of my writing life. I try to be a minimalist writer and let you develop your own mental picture of Rollie and Dao-Ming. In a series, of course, there’s an inevitable accretion of character traits, so I have to be careful to not destroy a reader’s already developed ideas–part of the writing challenge.
    Sounds like Angels was a fast read for you…I hope it was enjoyable. I had great fun writing it, but I usually do. It went even faster than The Midas Bomb. Teeter-Totter, on the other hand, because it’s a true mystery, gave me some grief, but I enjoyed the learning experience. And I think a pretty good story is the result. Virginia Morgan is between a mystery and a thriller, so the “work” involved in the writing was in between in difficulty.