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Elvis Mitchell

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Elvis Mitchell
Mitchell in 2007
Born(1958-12-06)December 6, 1958(age 65)
Alma materWayne State University(1980)
OccupationFilm critic
Years active1980–present

Elvis Mitchell(born December 6, 1958) is an Americanfilm critic,host of the public radio showThe Treatment,and visiting lecturer atHarvard University.[1]He has served as a film critic for theFort Worth Star-Telegram,theLA Weekly,The Detroit Free Press,andThe New York Times.He had also been an interviewer forInterview Magazine.[2]In the summer of 2011, he was appointed as curator ofLACMA's new film series, Film Independent at LACMA. He is also currently a Film Scholar and lecturer at theUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Life and career[edit]

Mitchell was born inHighland Park, Michigan,in theMetro Detroitarea. He graduated in 1980 fromWayne State University,where he majored in English. He was a film critic for theFort Worth Star-Telegram,theLA Weekly,The Detroit Free Press,andThe New York Times.[3]

In the 1990s, Mitchell was part of a short-livedPBSshow calledEdge.[4]On the series, he provided film commentary and general criticism. In one segment, Mitchell offered a quick run-down of all of directorOliver Stone'stropes,including "always keep that camera moving," which he said while moving a camcorder over a model of aVietnamjungle and prison camp set up on a table. He was also the host of theIndependent Film Channel'sIndependent Focus,a one-on-one interview show in front of a live audience from 1998 to 2001.

In March 2005 Mitchell was announced as the co-head (along with producer Deborah Schindler) of a New York City office for Sony'sColumbia Pictures.Mitchell's role would be to help scout new minority talent and make movies for minority audiences. Yet Mitchell simply disappeared, leaving Schindler to run the office alone and to this day refuses to discuss his odd behavior.[5]

From 2008 to 2010, Mitchell co-producedThe Black List,a three-part series of documentaries about African Americans in the entertainment industry, with directorTimothy Greenfield-Sanders.The first film,The Black List(2008), includesToni Morrison,Chris RockandKareem Abdul-Jabbaramong others.The Black List: Volume 2(2009) featuresAngela Davis,Tyler PerryandRZA,among others.The Black List: Volume 3(2010) includes interviews withJohn Legend,Lee DanielsandWhoopi Goldberg,among others.

Since 1996, Mitchell has been the host ofSanta Monica, California,public radio stationKCRW's pop culture and film interview programThe Treatment,which is nationally distributed and podcast. He served for a number of years as a pop culture commentator forWeekend EditiononNPR.In 2008,Elvis Mitchell: Under the Influencebegan airing onTurner Classic Movies.On the program, Mitchell interviews actors and directors about their favorite classic films.

Mitchell is featured in the 2009 documentary filmFor the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticismdiscussing how he was championed as a young writer byPauline Kael,and the impact on him as an adolescent of theHerschell Gordon Lewisfilm,Two Thousand Maniacs!.[6]

On September 10, 2010, film criticRoger Ebertannounced that he would be returning to television on a movie review show that he was producing for public television. He also announced that Mitchell, along with film criticChristy Lemireof theAssociated Press,would be featured on the new program reviewing the new films released.[7]On December 14, 2010, theChicago Sun-Timesreported that Mitchell would not be appearing on the new show.[8]

In January 2011 it was announced that Mitchell had joined theMovielineas chief film critic, along with Stephanie Zacharek.[9]Penske Media Corp terminated him after more than three months as Movieline.com's chief film critic.[10]

Mitchell has been hired by theLACMAin partnership withFilm Independentas curator of a new film series, Film Independent at LACMA. It was announced on June 16, 2011, that Mitchell would start his new job on the weekly film series this July. The series launched on October 13, 2011, with the world premiere ofThe Rum Diary,an adaptation ofHunter S. Thompson's novel, by directorBruce Robinson,starringJohnny Depp.[11]

On April 4, 2019, Mitchell was the moderator at the 2019CinemaConFilmmakers Forum, where the guests includedElizabeth Banks,Olivia Wilde,and theRusso brothers.On February 9, 2020, on the Red Carpet at the Oscars program, Mitchell said "capitalism is ruining humanity".

In October 2022, Mitchell's documentary filmIs That Black Enough for You?!?premiered at the New York Film Festival.[12]

In popular culture[edit]

In 2007, Mitchell appeared in an episode of theHBOTV seriesEntourage,playing himself.

In 2014, Mitchell was mentioned as "the bad boy of public radio" during theFOXTV seriesBob's Burgersepisode "Friends With Burger-Fits."

References[edit]

  1. ^"Conversation with Elvis Mitchell".Oxford.bside.com.2010. Archived fromthe originalon July 8, 2011.
  2. ^Klein, Michael (November 15, 2022)."Black Enough? A Brilliant New Documentary Explores the Black Experience in Film - SPIN".Spin.RetrievedMarch 1,2023.
  3. ^"Elvis Mitchell".KCRW.com.June 25, 2023.
  4. ^Susan King (September 29, 1991)."ROBERT KRULWICH: Pushing PBS to the 'Edge'".Los Angeles Times.
  5. ^Finke, Nikki(April 23, 2011)."Elvis Mitchell Terminated As Chief Movie Critic Of Movieline Over Review Mystery".Deadline Hollywood.
  6. ^For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticismat theTCM Movie Database
  7. ^Rousseau, Caryn (September 10, 2010)."Roger Ebert to appear on movie review show".Yahoo! News.Associated Press.RetrievedSeptember 11,2010.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^"Critical decision near for Eberts' movie show".Chicago Sun-Times.September 10, 2011.
  9. ^"Welcome Movieline's New Contributors, Including Critic Elvis Mitchell!".Movieline.January 12, 2011. Archived fromthe originalon March 4, 2011.RetrievedMarch 18,2011.
  10. ^Finke, Nikki(April 23, 2011)."Elvis Mitchell Terminated As Chief Movie Critic Of Movieline Over Review Mystery".Deadline Hollywood.
  11. ^"Elvis Mitchell at LACMA".The Hollywood Reporter.RetrievedMarch 12,2017.
  12. ^"Is That Black Enough for You?!?".Film At Lincoln Center.September 4, 2022.

External links[edit]