RottenTomatoes.com
Log In | Register | What is RT?
Check out the new RT Community
  • Home
  • Movies
  • DVD
  • Celebrities
  • News
  • Critics
  • Trailers & Pictures
  • CommunityBeta
  • Features
  • | Columns
  • | Guides
RT Search Powered by Google
help icon Enhanced RT
searches on Google
Click here to turn on enhanced search results from RT on your Google searches.
 
News / Columns / Meet a Critic
Meet a Critic: USA Today's Claudia Puig Surveys The Critical Landscape
...and tells us how a female beat reporter became the only critic at the nation's largest newspaper.
by Jen Yamato | April 01, 2008
Discuss Article
Page | 1 2
Meet a Critic - Claudia Puig Name: Claudia Puig

Publication: USA Today

Age: 25*

Hometown: Walla Walla, Washington*

Years reviewing film: 20*

*April Fool's!


It's a bit difficult to get in touch with Claudia Puig these days. With two teenage daughters at home and anywhere between three to five or more movie reviews to write each week, the USA Today scribe balances an impossibly packed schedule. It's almost unfathomable to think that the nation's highest-circulated newspaper has only one film critic on staff, but the print veteran -- who spent three years covering police and courtroom assignments and eight covering the entertainment industry at the LA Times -- takes it in stride. "I've always said that if you're good at covering a beat, it can be any beat," Puig says.

But what sets Puig (pronounced "pweeg") apart isn't just her position as the most visible film critic at USA Today, or the fact that she is one of only six female members of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. She also belongs to a breed of critic that some consider rare -- that which is equal parts cineaste and populist in nature. While plenty of other critics might count the Gregory Peck classic To Kill a Mockingbird and Paul Thomas Anderson's Magnolia among their favorites ("I use Magnolia as my litmus test," says Puig. "If people don't like that movie, I don't want to have anything to do with them!"), how many reputable film writers will admit to loving Zoolander with nearly as much zest?

RT talked to Claudia Puig about her transition from journalist to critic, the unique voice and position of USA Today as a source of film reviews, the tenuous future of print criticism, and why it's so hard to pick just one favorite film and director (she's got four).


What is your favorite film?

Claudia Puig: This is always tough to answer and I add a lot of new favorites every year, but if I have to name one movie that has consistently moved me every time I see it, it's probably To Kill a Mockingbird. But right after To Kill a Mockingbird is Magnolia. That's the weirdest duo. In fact, I use Magnolia as my litmus test; if people don't like that movie, I don't want to have anything to do with them. It's pretty horrible of me, actually. Because it divides people; people either hate or love that movie. And if people hated it or just thought it was pretentious -- sorry, you're not on my list! But if you love that movie we have an instant connection.

Who is your favorite director?

CP: It's a four-way tie: Ang Lee and Alfonso Cuaron and Clint Eastwood and Paul Thomas Anderson.

What's the worst movie you've ever seen, and why?

CP: That's tough. There's a long list of terrible movies every year. The answer for this depends on when you ask me. But I tend to hate facile, slapstick, maudlin holiday movies like Christmas with the Kranks.

Why did you become a critic?

CP: I've loved movies since I was a little kid. I had a mom that spoke about her favorite films a lot and her enthusiasm was contagious. She would sit me down and have me watch certain ones saying, "You've got to see this, it's an amazing performance!" And I had a dad who would take me to Fellini movies, and Bunuel movies, and Truffaut movies -- so both of my parents were major film aficionados. I grew up loving movies.

Was there a defining movie moment for you growing up?

CP: You know, I keep coming back to To Kill a Mockingbird. I remember being about ten and my mother telling me, "You have to watch this." I remember being absolutely mesmerized by it, particularly Gregory Peck's performance. Then I saw it as an adult and the feeling remained. Years later, when my daughters were about ten I did the same thing with them, saying "Ok, sit down, you have to watch this movie!" They loved it too. Somehow that film played a key role in my feeling about movies.

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

CP: I wanted to be a lot of things, over the years. A teacher, an interior decorator, a veterinarian, even a nun (for about 10 minutes). But probably most of the time I wanted to be a writer.

USA Today has a very unique voice among print media. How would you describe it?

CP: It's very much for the masses. I don't mean to imply the lowest common denominator. It's for the masses who seek information in a more concise package. The way I like to describe it is that the paper is populist in its orientation. It's not the New York Times; it's not elitist. It's not even the LA Times, which is more of a writer's paper and a bit more focused towards the industry. But we cover much of the same stories, and then some. Our mandate is to write very efficiently and concisely. USA Today has a direct voice, and most of the stories are pithy and to the point, so you have to learn to work within that.

If you had free reign, would your writing be much different?

CP: Yes, it would be different. It would definitely be a lot longer. But [USA Today] really does what it does well, and it serves a purpose and it does that in a really effective way. There's some really good writing. It's the number one paper in this country and it's also read a lot overseas. Most people are busy, and most people get their news from various different sources, and most people don't have the time -- as much as I love reading the New Yorker -- they don't really have the time to delve that deeply into things.

What other film critics/bloggers/entertainment journalists do you read regularly?

CP: I have a lot of colleagues whose work I really admire: Joe Morgenstern at the Wall Street Journal, A.O. Scott at the New York Times, both Anthony Lane and David Denby at the New Yorker, Michael Phillips in Chicago, Peter Rainer at the Christian Science Monitor and many others.

What does a film need to achieve to earn a perfect rating from Claudia Puig?

CP: No matter the genre, it must be superbly executed, exceptionally written and consistently brilliantly acted.

When you try to come up with "favorites," it's such a tough call, because there are great movies (often foreign or independent films) and then there are wonderful movies you can watch over and over again, that are personal favorites because they make you laugh or cry so easily -- for instance, I can watch Monty Python and the Holy Grail over and over again. I can watch Zoolander over and over again! They're such crazy funny movies. For amazing movies that make you cry there's The Sweet Hereafter, The Ice Storm, a French film called Ponette. And then there are other movies are simply amazing, the movies that make you sit up a little straighter in the theater and feel this... tingle of excitement. The ones that make you say: "Whoa! This is something different." I remember feeling that when I saw Three Kings, Magnolia, Spirited Away, You Can Count on Me, Out of Sight, The Celebration, The Lives of Others, After the Wedding, and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
Next Page >>
Bookmark and Share
Page | 1 2
Comments (1-20 of 21 posts) | Reply
Ali_G
Ali_G writes:
on Apr 01 2008 06:17 PM

I liked the interview. I don't always agree with her reviews, but I don't think she is a mean cynic like a lot of reviewers. She's a pretty lady too :)

(Reply to this)
eddieb
eddieb writes:
on Apr 01 2008 07:49 PM

Magnolia!!! Hells Yeah!!!

(Reply to this)
iakobos
iakobos writes:
on Apr 01 2008 08:24 PM

I travel a lot so I get the USA Today all the time in my hotels. Consequently, I read her reviews weekly and almost never like them. Our tastes are far too different. As someone who likes action movies, Puig is someone who seldom if ever does too.

(Reply to this)
seattlebill
seattlebill writes:
on Apr 01 2008 09:50 PM

well, i guess Puig and i won't be friends (yes, MAGNOLIA was pretentious and THERE WILL BE BLOOD was overrated). she makes no mention of her colleague at USA TODAY who got bumped to DVD reviews, Mike Clark. Clark is a superb critic, while Puig writes like one who merely fell into the assignment. her directors choices indicate a pretty short memory.

(Reply to this)
Watch It!
Watch It! writes:
on Apr 01 2008 10:22 PM

I hope she's joking about that Magnolia comment! If not, she's an idiot. You cannot adequately judge someone's film taste based on their opinion of one movie (irregardless of how much you may love this particular film).

Pretty much all your comments are correct seattlebill. Her list of favorite directors indicates a lack of film knowledge period. So all the best directors come from the last ~20 years (at most) of film??


(Reply to this)
Broadway Danny Rose
Broadway Danny Rose writes:
on Apr 01 2008 11:23 PM

"As a woman of color,"...

What "color" are we supposed to realize that she is?
The only thing the photo indicates is that she ought to be dropping the value-size popcorn bucket.


(Reply to this)
tomwaitsjr
tomwaitsjr writes:
on Apr 02 2008 06:01 AM

In reply to this comment (#1665256)
Magnolia was pretentious, pointless, and had too many frogs.

I really don't understand people that like that film over the far superior "Boogie Nights."

I also found Punch Drunk Love incredibly un-funny and at times painful to watch.

I did like "there will be blood" though. . .


(Reply to this)
eddieb
eddieb writes:
on Apr 02 2008 08:02 AM

Uhu. Magnolia was suppose to be pretentious. PTA has even commented on it saying that he just wanted to make a "look at me. watch me dance" kinda film. its suppose to be self confident and over the top. that was the whole point.

And humor is an opinion. I personaly found Punch Drunk Love to be very funny and very intersting. Even my mother watched it one day and loved it. She laughed the whole way through.

Why tear movies down like these? PTA isnt a director and writer who makes films for money. Non of his films our "mainstream". He makes and writes what he wants to.

Who are you guys to say weather the effort of a writer/director like PTA is good enough or not. Sure, there are some horrible movies out there but its pretty clear that films like Boogie nights and Magnolia wernt small efferts. these were films done on small bugets with the effort and collaboration of many people. Magnolia alone was done for less that half a million dollars which is obviouly alot of money but not in the movie world.

How about one of you write for several months, take a camera, get a crew together, recieve the sufficent funds, and make a movie. We'll see how it turns out. Lets see how it compares to one of PT Anderson's films.

Sure i love reading reviews and seeing what critics say about a film but when a movie that was clearly a full effort and the filmakers point plenty of time into their film, why cast it down. It irritates the hell out of me when is see that a film like Schindler's List or Memento and the tomato meter is not 100. And i realize that not Every single critic is going to give a film(most films) a positve review but when i see that one has give films like those a negative review i just wanna wring their neck and yell 'Dont you realize its HARD to make a film! Why dont You go make a movie like Momento. lets see what your effort produces!'

the end


(Reply to this)
Bruce Campbell
Bruce Campbell writes:
on Apr 02 2008 09:22 AM

She's an awful person and critic.

(Reply to this)
Jen Yamato
Jen Yamato writes:
on Apr 02 2008 10:07 AM

seattlebill, Puig did mention Mike Clark moving over to USA Today's DVD section during the course of our discussion. It was my decision to leave it out of the final article.

(Reply to this)
Jen Yamato
Jen Yamato writes:
on Apr 02 2008 10:14 AM

BDR, Bruce Campbell - that kind of comment does not make for respectable discourse on RT. I'd like to think our readership is more thoughtful and intelligent than that.

Back to Puig: Magnolia is totally a love it or hate it movie, and while I didn't love it, I don't hate it either. PT Anderson is definitely one of those divisive filmmakers...I love just about every other film of his.


(Reply to this)
El Pajaro Con Suelas
El Pajaro Con Suelas writes:
on Apr 02 2008 10:29 AM

Bruce Campbell is right. What's the point of interviewing someone this trifling?

(Reply to this)
tomwaitsjr
tomwaitsjr writes:
on Apr 02 2008 10:43 AM

I think people are getting too touchy. I've even seen Hard Eight once I realized PTA was involved with it(but hated the edit). He's a gifted director when it comes to letting actors act, and not doing ridiculous jump-cuts, etc. He's almost a throwback in that sense.

But, c'mon, let people criticize and voice their opinions about films, other people's opinions, etc. Otherwise how are they going to improve?

Except SCREECH (Dustin Diamond). I'd rather see a Uwe Boll film than that annoyance in so much as a commercial.



(Reply to this)
homeimp
homeimp writes:
on Apr 02 2008 11:50 AM

Why does RottenTomatoes persist in believing I want to meet a critic? Honestly, I'd rather meet a genuine movie lover, in other words a fan.

(Reply to this)
Jen Yamato
Jen Yamato writes:
on Apr 02 2008 12:14 PM

homeimp, if you didn't want to meet a critic, why click on the article?

The point of this column is to bridge the gap between film critics and film audiences - a divide that has gotten to be far too wide, in my opinion. People complain that critics are out of touch with what movie goers like/think/want to see. You, homeimp, would rather talk to another fan than a professional critic. That's fine. I love talking to other movie lovers as well. But most critics ARE movie lovers, and not all of them only like highfalutin' art movies, as I've often seen generalized in our forums and comments on RT.

In fact, Claudia Puig named her personal favorite films above and the reply from some seemed to complain that she didn't name more "esteemed" directors and films.

So, where's the balance here, readers? Many of you have the same interests and reactions and favorites and dislikes as the critics who are, en masse, sometimes dismissed as being movie snobs. Why is it that when we talk to critics as we do in this column, the reverse seems to happen?



(Reply to this)
Dunk
Dunk writes:
on Apr 02 2008 01:19 PM

In reply to this comment (#1666058)
Jen,

Thanks for the comedic post above (Magnolia is a love it or hate it movie--but I don't love it or hate it--priceless! You were meaning that to be funny, weren't you?). Anyhow, I agree with Jen that bridging the gap between critics and audiences is noble goal and this woman seems to be far less offensive than most of the other critics that have been interviewed (at least she actually named a movie as the worst she has ever seen that most would agree is a terrible movie--unlike many of the other critics that named movies that have over 50% tomato meters). But, I do dislike Magnolia quite a bit, so I guess the two of us will never hang out (Oh well).


(Reply to this)
davechung
davechung writes:
on Apr 02 2008 03:02 PM

I really enjoyed this Meet a Critic and Mr. Puig comes across as a really nice person who is taking an honest step-back at life as a movie critic as an industry and the whole print industry as a whole (something that happens to be of interest to me). Those were not easy questions to answer and she handled them very well!

I'm with Ali-G, Ms. Puig is a bit of a looker! :) I'm going to have to check out Magnolia this weekend.


(Reply to this)
davechung
davechung writes:
on Apr 02 2008 03:03 PM

In reply to this comment (#1666548)
Oh man, Ms. Puig. Bad typo!

(Reply to this)
Blake
Blake writes:
on Apr 02 2008 04:26 PM

In reply to this comment (#1665916)
Claudia Puig is a very good writer, concise and to the point with the limited number of words USA Today allows her for spacing considerations. I generally check what she has to say about a film before I go off to see it. Most times I agree with her reviews.




(Reply to this)
Boss Fan
Boss Fan writes:
on Apr 02 2008 06:19 PM

Jen Yamato writes:
on Apr 02 2008 10:07 AM

"Puig did mention Mike Clark moving over to USA Today's DVD section during the course of our discussion. It was my decision to leave it out of the final article."

Um, the obvious question here then is 'why?' That is the main thing I clicked on this interview to find out about, as I have been wondering what the deal was with his decline in reviews since I noticed them beginning to disappear probably 3 years ago now. I know he's been around awhile, perhaps he is easing into retirement, and he has made no secret he prefers DVD viewing and classic films, so perhaps that is it, and perhaps USA Today just sh*t-canned him. Either way, I'd like to know, and if she said, in all fairness to us, your readers, you should print it. Unless she asked otherwise, it seems journalistic ethics would dictate we are entitled to know what she said about this. Or are you saving that for "Meet Critic: Mike Clark"?


(Reply to this)
Read More Comments
Page | 1 2
Post Your Comment
You must be registered to post comments. Login or Register.

Related Links

Claudia Puig
  • About

Related Articles

  • Meet a Critic: USA Today's Claudia Puig Surveys The Critical Landscape (21)

Most Discussed

  • Deconstructing Harry, Day 1: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (66)
  • Box Office Guru Wrapup: Transformers and Ice Age Tie for Top Spot (59)
  • Weekly Ketchup: Universal Takes on Asteroids (46)
  • Five Favorite Films with Kathryn Bigelow (38)
  • RT on DVD: Knowing, Push, The Unborn Unleashed (26)
  • Total Recall: Mock Docs That Rock (20)
  • Five Favourite Films with Jaime Winstone (17)
  • Critics Consensus: Bruno is Certified Fresh (9)
  • Watch RT on Current TV (6)
  • Deconstructing Harry, Day 2: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (4)

Latest News

  • Deconstructing Harry, Day 2: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (4)
  • Critics Consensus: Bruno is Certified Fresh (9)
  • Box Office Guru Preview: Audiences in Style with Brüno (1)
  • Total Recall: Mock Docs That Rock (20)
  • Five Favourite Films with Jaime Winstone (17)
  • Deconstructing Harry, Day 1: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (66)
  • Five Favorite Films with Kathryn Bigelow (38)
  • RT on DVD: Knowing, Push, The Unborn Unleashed (26)
  • Win a Trip to the Premiere of Paper Heart! (2)
  • Watch RT on Current TV (6)

Latest Interviews

  • RT Interview: Director Carlos Cuaron on Rudo and Cursi (0)
  • RT Interview: Tony Scott on The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 (10)
  • Cannes 2009: RT Interview - Sally Hawkins on We Want Sex (2)
  • RT Interview: Tilda Swinton on Julia (5)
  • Hollywood Legend Debbie Reynolds Reflects On her Life in Showbiz (10)
  • Exclusive: McG Talks Terminator Salvation (24)
  • Georgia Groome - Fresh Talent on RT (5)
  • RT Interview: Reading The Reader with Stephen Daldry (11)
  • RT Interview: Oscar Nominee Melissa Leo (7)
  • Carey Mulligan - Fresh Talent on RT (7)

Latest Features

  • Five Favourite Films with Jaime Winstone (17)
  • Five Favorite Films with Kathryn Bigelow (38)
  • Blood: The Last Vampire -- Exclusive Concept Art and Artist Profile (14)
  • Five Favorite Films with Fred Durst (87)
  • Edinburgh 2009: RT's 10 Must-See Movies (10)
  • Five Favourite Films with Diego Luna (8)
  • Five Favourite Films with Gael Garcia Bernal (8)
  • Who's Who in Transformers 2? A Visual Guide (161)
  • Five Favorite Films with Antonio Banderas (39)
  • Five Favorite Films with Betty White (31)

Sponsored Links

 
 
About| Site Map| Help| RT To Go| Contact Us| Critics Submission| Linking to RT| Licensing| Movie List| Games| Celebs List| Newsletter
IGN Logo

IGN.com | GameSpy | Comrade | Arena | FilePlanet | GameSpy Technology
TeamXbox | Planets | Vaults | VE3D | CheatsCodesGuides | GameStats | GamerMetrics
AskMen.com | Rotten Tomatoes | Direct2Drive | Green Pixels


By continuing past this page, and by the continued use of this site, you agree to be bound by and abide by the User Agreement.
Copyright 1998-2009, IGN Entertainment, Inc. About IGN | Support | Advertise | Privacy Policy | User Agreement | Subscribe to RT's XML feed! IGN RSS Feeds
IGN's enterprise databases running Oracle, SQL and MySQL are professionally monitored and managed by Pythian Remote DBA
Certain product data ©1995-present Muze, Inc. For personal use only. All rights reserved.