Evelyn Library P.I. wrote: ↑Sun May 24, 2020 6:40 pm
I think I'd enjoy the ordinary Best of Poll, without restrictions on obscurity, in part because I've been preparing for it all year and have planned what I'll vote for and how I'm determining it (50-55 subheadings, 'favourite peplum' 'favourite silent western', etc.) (I, uh, love lists) I tend to value voting for obscurities more anyway, but I think a healthy mix of love of the familiar (Meet Me in St. Louis, The Searchers, whatever) helps it feel truer to my range of loves. This is a place where the obscure tends to get more due than elsewhere, and I wouldn't want it any other way, but it can also be meaningful to have a famous movie recommended or remembered. To know that a particular user thinks a particular classic deserves its reputation can help motivate me to see it.
I'd be interested in an 'Obscure Favs' if it was a distinct poll unto itself. I definitely share the sentiment that I like lists that recommend to me movies I've never heard of. The one problem is how to measure obscurity. The Laurel and Hardy short
Liberty, for example, is one of their most famous movies and probably still one of the most famous and iconic silent comedies. It has only 829 logs on Letterboxd. That's because the older and silent-er a movie is, the fewer viewers it has. Ideally, there'd be a sliding scale based on era, but that would probably be more work than people want.
Dirty Ho doesn't need any boosting among HK martial arts movie fans, but it has 1.3k on Letterboxd, because that region/genre itself is niche relative to Rocky II or God knows what else. And I'd argue that most people reading a SCFZ Obscure Favs list are probably already pretty familiar with, say, Jonathan Rosenbaum's Essential Films and thus it might not mean much to be told yet again that, say, Walsh's
Me and My Gal is a hidden gem (I actually prefer
Big Brown Eyes, but nevermind)
The point here is just that an Obscure Favs list might prove stocked with classics of niche interests (martial arts movies, silent movies surely, the majority of Straub-Huillet and other difficult avant-gardists, etc.). Those movies might be obscure relative to mainstream movie fandom, however we're defining that, but not necessarily obscure for cinephiles, which is what I at least would find most exciting. Don't mean to be a Debbie Downer, because I like the idea, I'm just thinking about how to make it work.
Lowering the Letterboxd number threshold to, say, 500 or even lower, would be my preference. I think that would solve the problems I stated above. It would, of course, come with the new problem that it would be hard for any such movies to get multiple votes in a poll, which might not be what we want. Then again, if all we want is an occasion for all of us to make and share Obscure Favs lists for each other to scour, I'm all for it.
Edit: And I'd of course love a 1940s poll and a wuxia poll!