
The House Next Door
Archive: The House
From the Editor
by Matt Zoller Seitz on January 1st, 2008 at 12:19 am in The House

Jan. 1, 2008 marks the second anniversary of this site's founding. Thanks to our contributors, comments section regulars, readers and linkers, and Happy New Year.
From the Editor
by Matt Zoller Seitz on August 23rd, 2007 at 5:03 am in The House

In the first week of August, 2007, The House Next Door asked Damian Arlyn, publisher of Windmills of my Mind, to join our bullpen. I had been meaning to extend this offer for some time, but didn't move until Damian began publishing "31 Days of Spielberg," a series of critical/biographical articles taking readers through Steven Spielberg's career, title by title. The project's ambition and the critic's lucid style convinced me and House co-editor Keith Uhlich to enlist Damian immediately and send Web traffic his way via stand-alone links to each new article.
This week, a discussion thread at Spielbergfilms.com accused Damian of taking descriptive phrases and sentences from Warren Buckland's book Directed by Steven Spielberg: Poetics of the Contemporary Hollywood Blockbuster without attribution. Damian accepted the charge and posted an explanation and apology here. He says he has corresponded with Buckland about the charges and has removed the problem articles from his site until he can "revise them so as to satisfy everyone (hopefully) that they have come from me alone and from nobody else." He intends to continue publishing "31 Days of Spielberg," picking up where the series left off.
Unfortunately, the nature of the charges means that this site can no longer endorse "31 Days of Spielberg." The House Next Door will not publish any more stand-alone links to the Spielberg series, and Damian's name has been removed from the masthead.
The House Next Door: Year One
by Matt Zoller Seitz on January 1st, 2007 at 4:51 pm in The House

To read The House Next Door's take on 2006, click here.
Jennifer Dawson, 1970 – 2006
by Matt Zoller Seitz on April 30th, 2006 at 9:45 am in The House
Sad, Sad News
by Alan Sepinwall on April 28th, 2006 at 7:10 am in The House
Hi, this is Alan Sepinwall, posting in Matt's place for reasons you'll understand in a minute. He's asked that I keep the lights on here while he's away, and since I can't pretend to be as smart about the cinema as him, I'm going to be relying on suggestions from you in the comments about things to post.
Anyway, I have some very bad news to share: Matt's wife Jennifer Dawson died suddenly Thursday evening. This is Matt's account of what happened, which he's not up to writing about himself for obvious reasons:
Sometime between 4:30 and 5 p.m., she was home with their kids, Hannah, 8, and James, 2. Hannah was playing downstairs, James was watching a show on Noggin, and Jennifer was online looking up information for the family's next trip to Disney World. Around a quarter to 5, Hannah came upstairs to ask Jennifer a question and found her lying on the floor in the office. She wasn't moving or breathing. Hannah tried to wake her up—yelling at her, slapping her in the face, pushing her—but nothing worked, so she ran upstairs to the apartment of Matt's brother Richard. Richard came down, called 911 and began performing CPR for 15-20 minutes while waiting for the ambulance. He got no response, nor did the paramedics when they arrived, and Jennifer was taken to Long Island College Hospital in Brooklyn, where she was pronounced dead of causes unknown. (For now, the chart lists "cardio-pulmonary" as cause of death, which, as the doctor put it, "That's a fancy way of saying we don't have a fucking clue.") Jennifer was 35, in good health, didn't drink, smoke or take drugs, so there will be a medical examination to find out what happened.
While all this was going on, Matt was standing at the Washington St. bus stop by the Ledger newsroom, waiting to begin the long journey home. Richard called him and told him that Jennifer had fainted and that he should get home ASAP. As Matt traveled by bus, then PATH, then subway train, he kept calling for updates, but there weren't any. Finally, when he arrived in Brooklyn, Richard told him to come to the hospital, where they broke the bad news.
Jennifer didn't want a burial or a funeral, so she's going to be cremated, and once Matt figures out where to scatter the ashes, there will be a memorial service, probably a few weeks from now. When I have more details, I'll let you know. In lieu of flowers, he asked for donations to be made to the Red Cross, which was one of Jennifer's favorite charities.
Matt isn't doing well, as you can imagine, but as he put it, "We're very pragmatic people, emotionally at least, the two of us were. I'm not in any sort of mindset where I'm thinking about large mystical issues or the grieving process or blah blah blah. Right now I'm looking through the schedule and seeing what bills were paid when; a lot of the practical things were on her, and now they fall to me."
James is too young to understand what's happened (when he saw his mother on the floor, he started making a snoring sound, his way of saying, "Mommy's sleeping"), and Matt says Hannah is holding up okay: "Obviously, we're all devastated, but Hannah is her mother's daughter and is very tough."
If you want to send cards, the address is 343 State Street, Brooklyn, NY 11217. Matt's also on e-mail a lot, either his work address (mseitz@starledger.com) or his home one (reeling@aol.com).
Feel free to forward this news to anyone you think would want to know.
Playing with Links
by Matt Zoller Seitz on March 19th, 2006 at 6:59 pm in The House

It's been a while since I went three days without a new post, but I'm tuckered out from my trip to RiverRun, which went very well. It's a friendly festival with good movies that really seems to have its act together, and audiences were plentiful and quite engaged. (Great Q&A's, at my movie and others.) The timing worked out so I got to interview director James Bai of Puzzlehead, who was out there at the same time, so you can expect that feature later in the week, to coincide with my NYPress review of his movie. Also, be sure to check back in tomorrow morning for a review of tonight's Sopranos episode.
And peruse the sidebar at right. By popular request, I've grouped links from some recurring topics (Terrence Malick, Robert Altman, television-related stuff) and regular features (5 for the Day, From the Short Stack) under common headings so they're easier to find. If anyone has any additional sidebar suggestions, post them below.
Reality Check
by Matt Zoller Seitz on February 8th, 2006 at 10:21 pm in The House

As you may have heard, the New York Press, which publishes my weekly column, has once again lost the top of its masthead. The paper's editor-in-chief, Harry Siegel, resigned Tuesday evening along with three other editors, to protest his publisher's decision not to republish cartoons that prompted furious, sometimes violent Muslim reaction throughout Europe and the Mideast. (Here's a Reuters story and a Gawker item summarizing what happened.)
Being a freelancer who files via email and rarely visits the office, I don't know anything about the political dynamics inside the paper. I can only say I've known Harry a few months, long enough to respect his intelligence and good humor and to deduce that he wasn't a showboating, storm-the-barricades-for-the-publicity type. Based on his resignation letter—reprinted in a New York Observer blog item headlined "NYPress kills cartoons: staff walks out"—I see no reason to revise either part of that opinion. Continue Reading »
One Bloggy Evening
by Matt Zoller Seitz on January 22nd, 2006 at 6:45 pm in Film, The House


I watched the re-cut The New World Saturday night and was knocked out, not just by the movie but by the circumstances. This was my third viewing of a version of the film, but my first time seeing it with a paying audience. It was unbelievably intense, but in the best way, possibly one of the most profound experiences I've ever had in a movie theater. I'm still gathering my thoughts, though—I don't want to rush into this one—so look for a full post late Sunday or sometime Monday.
Nutshell verdict: a different, more streamlined, slightly more prosaic and linear New World than I saw back in December, more clearly focused on Pocahantas/John Smith/John Rolfe, with less of a Transcendental, One World vibe. But still a knockout; different from, but equal to, the other cut; and most importantly, irrefutable proof that entertainment and art are not mutually exclusive. (The nearly sold out, racially and ethnically diverse audience at Brooklyn Academy of Music was divided on the movie's merits, but during the re-cut's 136 minutes, they barely stirred and almost never spoke, even in a whisper. It was so quiet in there that when somebody five rows down ate a piece of popcorn, you could hear them chewing.) I liked this movie's muscularity, its simplicity. Where the previous cut reminded me of The Thin Red Line, this one felt more like Days of Heaven.
More later. For now, I'm going to go all bloggy on you and offer photos of my niece Ivana, as promised long ago in another post. That's Ivana's hand in my brother Jeremy's hand. The group shot is of Ivana, Jeremy and my sister-in-law Valentina.
Open House
by Matt Zoller Seitz on January 1st, 2006 at 7:07 pm in The House

My grandfather, a self-educated German-American farmer from Olathe, Kansas, believed that no journey, however seemingly circuitous or self-destructive, was ever truly unnecessary, or even avoidable. Sometimes we just have to continue along a particular path for inexplicable, personal reasons, disregarding warnings of friends and family and perhaps our own internal voices, until we arrive at our destination, whatever it may be. This type of journey, my grandfather said, was the equivalent of "driving around the block backward to get to the house next door."



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