TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Shining Moonlight on IMDb

4 pointsby dfcarneyalmost 8 years ago

2 comments

csr12928834almost 8 years ago
It&#x27;s a really nice piece actually.<p>I have to confess I&#x27;ve never seen Moonlight, but it&#x27;s probably at the top of my list of recent films to see. I just haven&#x27;t had time to watch anything lately.<p>My one comment is that I think the phenomenon being observed isn&#x27;t unique to racism or Moonlight or films--I think it&#x27;s related to a work having a narrow audience and then that audience widening. The observation that &quot;as Moonlight’s acclaim grew, the film’s release widened from 650 theaters (November 18) to 1564 (post-Oscars)&quot; is important.<p>I&#x27;ve noticed this with blu-rays and books on Amazon as well. I&#x27;ve seen this with certain technical books a lot; initially they are highly rated, and then as word of mouth spreads, and they get introduced as textbooks, and people start mistaking them as introductions to a topic, you start seeing people get frustrated that they aren&#x27;t what they were looking for, even though the problem is the book was never for them to begin with. I suspect there is something unique about Moonlight, vis-a-vis racism and concerns about &quot;reverse racism&quot; at the Oscars (which in its strict form is undermined by the high critic ratings--you&#x27;d have to argue the white guilt extends to critics, who I don&#x27;t think experienced any change in that one way or another over recent years), but I also think something about going from niche to widely viewed also is relevant.<p>It would be interesting to compare Moonlight&#x27;s ratings to other films that had big increases in distribution in a short time, especially those that went from arthouse to widespread distribution. My guess is you would see similar phenomena.<p>I&#x27;m familiar with how to do analyses to examine bias, etc. and as far as I know IMDb doesn&#x27;t have the fine-grained level of ratings you&#x27;d need. For example, you&#x27;d want to show that somehow more specific subratings and their relationships with some overall rating changes.<p>There is rating by demographic, and it would be interesting to see how that might have changed over time--for example, if the demographic groups doing the ratings changed, or if the relationship between demographic and rating changed. I don&#x27;t think IMDb gives that kind of fine-grained detail.<p>You could go over the top as much as you want, though--doing topic analysis of written reviews over time, etc.
dfcarneyalmost 8 years ago
A friend of mine wrote this article. If anyone has suggestions on how to get ahold of more data (or ideas on further analysis) then, please, speak up.