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The Readers Respond to ‘Moviemakers, Movie Critics and You’ : Votes for the Reader and the L.A. Weekly

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Although one person cited in the article properly draws a distinction between critics and reviewers, Mitchell and all others whom he quoted seem to improperly consider the two terms synonymous.

A critic is someone who attempts to establish a body of standards--usually aesthetic, but sometimes social, political, religious, etc.--by which a would-be work of art may be considered serious and successful or not; the critic sometimes then goes on to measure particular works against his criteria.

A reviewer is a writer--almost always a journalist--who describes a piece of popular entertainment in general terms, indicates whether he or she enjoyed it and suggests how the general consumer of entertainment is likely to like or dislike it.

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Of the people regularly commenting on motion pictures in the Los Angeles area, Henry Sheehan of the Reader comes closest to being a critic; everyone else is a reviewer, of slightly greater or considerably less intelligence.

ROBERT H.K. WALTER, Los Angeles

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