Loving Letterboxd
Monday is movies. (Sometimes TV). Today it's all about the film social media site, Letterboxd.
Right through high school, I kept a diary. Every day, an entry. Itβs not interesting stuff at all, but I guess it got me in the zone for when social media arrived β more than that, I like to think it was like leg-day at the gym for writing. I hit it hard and honed the muscle β preparing me then for more than just social media; my adult life has been a series of writing tasks that require regularity: blogging, this newsletter, newspaper reviews β and my own approach to poems and creative writing has been shaped by this too.
The other thing I love is lists.
My diaries all had pages at the back where I listed all of the cassette tapes I purchased, the books I read and the movies I watched.
So for years now Iβve updated my Discogs account which lists all my CDs and vinyl; Iβve set a reading challenge and updated my Goodreads page with mini capsule reviews of every book Iβve read, trying my best to remember back to what I was reading as a kid alsoβ¦
And, after a few years of wondering how I might catalogue films, I found Letterboxd. It was launched 10 years ago β and was created in New Zealand. Letterboxd is a site for movie nerds. You can list all the films youβre watching and make other lists β creating wishlists or themes, thereβs the option to follow/friend other users and to just generally be part of the social media aspect of it, and you can read reviews from fellow movie goers.
I love my Letterboxd account β I update it most days. Setting myself the ridiculous task of trying to remember every film Iβve ever seen. I have a pretty good memory. But Iβve been watching movies near-nonstop for over 30 years now. So thereβll never be a way of cataloguing everything. That thrill though is implicit in the chase.
Iβve now logged over 7000 films. It might be still a drop in the ocean. But itβs a fun task.
This weekend I upgraded my account to the pro setting β meaning I dropped them some cash, a small annual fee to go ad-free. And thereβs a few other perks too.
It means now I can probably start a list of the movies I actually own, which is cool β since Iβve just made the decision this year to buy back into physical media and start a small, curated collection of films I must have. Iβm buying them super cheap β thrift stores, DVD sales, TradeMe, and I still review movies for my site, Off The Tracks so Iβm sometimes sent screener-links, other times actual DVDs and Blu-Rays.
The other thing I did β exciting weekend here! β was add all of the film reviews Iβve written to Letterboxd.
I write about film here on a Monday, but I also have pumped out a few movie reviews over the years (DVDs or actual theatre-visiting experiences). And I have word-doc copies of at least 10 years of movie and music reviews.
I donβt write about every film I see, but Iβve still written hundreds of reviews. Iβve uploaded them all to Letterboxd β because itβs free to check out any of the content (you have to create an account if you want to start your own lists, and there are mobile apps and all of the usual jazz).
So you can now check out 28 pages (and growing) of my film reviews on Letterboxd.
I donβt know if thatβs a lot or a little, again thereβll be users offering far more than I am β and users that run their own private world on there and neither write nor use reviews.
Anyway, I just wanted to mention this β been wanting to write about Letterboxd for a while, because itβs given me great joy over the last year or two, sitting down to remember the films Iβve seen and assigning a rating, looking through lists and collections that some of the other users have made.
I havenβt gone down the path of listing the number of times Iβve seen certain films, you can clarify that something is a rewatch β but hey, thereβs always next winter for thatβ¦
One of the really great things about being old and uncool is understanding, finally, that none of this matters whatsoever, but also on some level if itβs not hurting, then it actually is helping.