On the morning of January 30, 2024, a memo went out to the staff of The New Yorker. David Remnick (b. 1958), the editor, announced that Justin Chang, the film critic of the Los Angeles Times, would join the magazine on February 12. In the same memo he announced that Anthony Lane (b. 1962), the magazine’s film critic since 1993, would widen his lens to all the arts and whatever else appealed to him. Remnick called Lane “the wittiest and wisest of essayists” and noted that John Updike (1932-2009) had once compared his paragraphs to champagne. Lane’s last movie column would run in the anniversary issue.
The trade press read the memo one way. Remnick’s staff read it another. Jeffrey Wells, the blogger behind Hollywood Elsewhere, read it a third way and said so within hours: Lane’s “senior stripes have been torn off.” Whether the change amounted to promotion, retirement, or polite demotion depends on who tells the story. What the memo settled beyond dispute is that a thirty-one-year run had ended, and with it one of the last full careers built on the premise that a weekly film review in a general-interest magazine could be a work of literature.
Lane was born in 1962 and educated at Sherborne School, a boys’ boarding school in Dorset founded in the sixteenth century, the kind of institution that stocks a boy with Latin tags, chapel hymns, and a lifelong instinct for the comic gap between high diction and low subject. He went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, took a degree in English, and stayed for graduate work on T. S. Eliot (1888-1965). The Eliot research matters more than it might appear. Eliot built poems from fragments of older poems and trusted the reader to hear the echoes. Lane built reviews the same way. A notice of a summer action picture might carry, without signposting, a cadence from Tennyson or a joke structure from Wodehouse. Cambridge gave him the training of the close reader. He spent the next four decades applying it to material the academy considered beneath close reading.
He did not take the academic path. He went into Grub Street instead, freelancing and reviewing books for The Independent, the London broadsheet founded in 1986. The paper appointed him deputy literary editor in 1989. In 1991 he became film critic of The Independent on Sunday. The apprenticeship was short. He had been reviewing films for roughly two years when the call came from New York.
Tina Brown (b. 1953) took over The New Yorker in 1992 with a mandate from S. I. Newhouse to make the magazine faster, buzzier, and profitable. She raided London for talent she already knew. The film post carried a particular weight of inheritance. Pauline Kael (1919-2001) had reviewed movies for the magazine from 1968 to 1991, and her office, her sentences, and her partisans still occupied the premises. American candidates had grown up in her shadow. Lane, by his own account, had not. He admired Kael but had not been raised inside her cult, and he later speculated that this was the point of hiring him: Brown needed someone who might sit at that desk without flinching. He recalled arriving for his meeting with Brown in 1993 too nervous to eat breakfast. He was thirty-one.
He took the job and kept his London life. For three decades he filed from England, flying to New York when required, watching films in screening rooms and, whenever possible, in ordinary theaters with paying civilians. He made the practice a principle. In the introduction to his 2002 collection he set down five maxims for the aspiring critic, among them: never read the publicity material, see everything regardless of budget, sit with regular audiences rather than other critics, and pass sentence the day after a film opens or else wait fifty years. The fifth maxim warned against his own conduct on a broiling summer day in 1997, when he ran through Manhattan heat to a screening of Contact, arrived panting at the opening credits, and began taking notes on how gloomy and creepy the film looked, only to realize that his sunstruck eyes had not yet adjusted to the dark. The story is self-mockery with a doctrine inside it: the critic’s body, its sweat and its dilating pupils, sits in the theater along with the critic’s mind, and an honest review accounts for both.
In 2002 Alfred A. Knopf published Nobody’s Perfect: Writings from The New Yorker, a 752-page collection of 140 pieces divided into movies, books, and profiles. The title comes from the last line of Some Like It Hot, the 1959 comedy directed by Billy Wilder (1906-2002), and a profile of Wilder closes the book. The collection opens with Lane telling the reader he is holding a hunk of old journalism, and that the prospect has little appeal. The apology is a feint. The book sold, won admirers, and fixed his reputation.
Laura Miller, reviewing the collection in The New York Times, wrote that “Lane writes prose the way Fred Astaire danced,” a concoction of glide and snap, though she flinched at the puns. The comparison to Kael became standard. Miller drew it in terms of ego: Kael seized the reader and dragged him through her experience of a movie; Lane does not insist, he cajoles. Nicholas Lezard, in the British press, put the division in terms of pleasure: when the film has merit, Lane says what the merit is; when the film is bad, he enjoys himself. Filmmakers read him too, and some wrote to say so. Steven Spielberg (b. 1946), Wes Anderson (b. 1969), and Richard Linklater (b. 1960) were among the directors who sent praise, which raises its own question about a critic’s independence and answers it, in Lane’s case, with a record of panning films by directors who liked him.
Awards followed the collection’s material. In 2001 Lane won the National Magazine Award for Reviews and Criticism, on the strength of three pieces from 2000: an essay on The Sound of Music and its cult, an essay on the photographs of Walker Evans (1903-1975), and an essay on the lunar photography of the Apollo program. The jury’s selection tells the story of his method. None of the three is a review of a new release. All three take a popular visual object and read it with the full pressure of literary attention. By 2010 the review aggregator Metacritic weighted Lane’s judgments more heavily than any other critic’s, a status detail worth pausing over: an algorithm built to average opinion had concluded that this one opinion deserved a thumb on the scale.
The style itself resists summary but has parts that can be named. Lane opens at an angle, often far from the film, and lets the approach become the argument. He watches bodies before he interprets souls: the walk, the hat, the cigarette, the way an actor crosses a room, habits of attention formed on the silent comedians and the studio-era stars he returns to throughout his career, Buster Keaton (1895-1966) above all, then Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980) and Grace Kelly (1929-1982). He treats pretension, not badness, as the capital crime. A cheap thriller that knows what it is might get an affectionate notice. A prestige picture that mistakes murk for depth gets the full treatment, delivered with courtesy, which makes it worse. His famous demolitions, of Star Wars prequels, of Dan Brown adaptations, of ABBA musicals, circulated for years among readers who never saw the films. That circulation is the tell. The reviews outlived their occasions, which is the working definition of literature and the standing charge against him: that the performance eclipses the object, that the joke arrives before the patience, that a Lane review is in the end about Lane.
He heard the charge for thirty years and built a partial defense into his practice. He reviewed from theaters, never from tapes. He submitted to the magazine’s fact-checking department, an American institution that many English writers find insulting, and declared himself a convert, describing the checker as “someone who is encouraging me to get things right in the first place.” The line is from a 2002 interview with Robert Birnbaum, conducted in Boston while Lane toured the collection, and the exchange around it shows the manner. Birnbaum asked whether Lane’s first viewing would always be in a theater. Absolutely, Lane said, and if the studios ever abolished press screenings and made critics buy tickets on Friday like everyone else, fine by him. Then start now, Birnbaum said. Why don’t I, Lane said. Why don’t you, Birnbaum said. Well, maybe I will, Lane said. The volley is pure Lane: the principle held with conviction, the self held loosely, the exchange timed like a two-reeler.
Lane’s arrival coincided with the peak of the American magazine critic’s authority, and his tenure spans its erosion. In 1993 a review in The New Yorker could shape what educated audiences saw. By 2024, streaming, aggregation, fan media, and the collapse of theatrical moviegoing had stripped the weekly critic of gatekeeping power. Lane survived the erosion because his franchise never rested on the verdict. Readers came for the sentences and stayed for the education in looking. A Lane review of a forgettable film taught the reader how to watch faces, how to hear a score doing the screenplay’s work, how to catch a genre convention on its third lap. The film was the occasion; the attention was the product.
Inside the magazine he shared the film desk for years with David Denby (b. 1943), who covered the earnest and the ambitious while Lane took the openings that promised comedy, and later with Richard Brody, the magazine’s online film voice and Godard biographer, whose auteurist and politically committed criticism sits at the opposite pole from Lane’s. The arrangement had the look of a balanced portfolio. Lane’s skepticism toward the auteur cult is temperamental and English. He prefers craft to vanity and proportion to sprawl, respects the collaborative intelligence of the old studio system, and declines to treat visible ambition as achievement. The preference cost him standing with cinephile factions for whom rupture and rawness certify seriousness, and it made him, by the 2020s, a target of a newer complaint: that his criticism floats above politics, that wit is a way of not having a position. The complaint misreads him. Lane has positions. He holds that self-importance is a moral failure, that beauty is information, and that a culture which stops noticing craft will get less of it. Those are positions. The moment demanded other positions.
The January 2024 transition can be read through any of these lenses. Remnick’s memo praised him without qualification and framed the change as liberation. Chang, a former Variety and Los Angeles Times critic with a National Society of Film Critics chairmanship and a reputation for both elegance and social conscience, represented a generational and temperamental succession. Wells, speaking for an older faction of film culture, saw a beloved stylist shoved aside for a critic more aligned with the politics of the institution. Lane said nothing in public, which is in character, and went on writing: on Vermeer, on Anthony Hopkins (b. 1937), on Robert Redford (1936-2025), on plagiarism, on film restoration, on Elmore Leonard (1925-2013), on the centenary of The Waste Land, and, in May 2025, on the combative memoirs of The New Yorker’s own writers and editors, an essay in which the magazine’s longest-serving import examined the institution that had housed him for three decades.
Lane has kept his private life out of his prose to a degree unusual in his generation of journalists. For many years he lived in London and then in Cambridge, England, with Allison Pearson (b. 1960), the Welsh-born columnist and novelist whose 2002 bestseller I Don’t Know How She Does It drew on the life of a working mother. They have two children, a daughter born in January 1996 and a son born in August 1998. Sources describe the relationship inconsistently: some reference works list Pearson as his wife, others as his longtime partner, and more recent accounts describe her as his former partner. Pearson became, in the 2010s and 2020s, a prominent and polarizing voice of the British right at The Daily Telegraph, a public trajectory that ran opposite to Lane’s studied reticence. He built no persona from his domestic arrangements, gave few interviews, and let the byline do the living.
Lane belongs to the tradition of the British man of letters transplanted to an American institution, a line that runs through Alistair Cooke and Wilfrid Sheed, writers whose authority came from range, reading, and verbal command rather than credentialed expertise. His career demonstrates what that model could still produce in its final decades and what it costs. The strengths and the vulnerabilities share a root. The wit that made his reviews durable is the wit that sometimes crowded the film off the page. The detachment that protected his judgment from publicity and fashion is the detachment that critics of a more engaged school read as evasion. The comic proportion that punctured pretension might also deflect the surrender that certain films ask of a viewer, and Lane knows it; his warmest writing, on Keaton, on Wilder, on the moon photographs, comes when the object earns his surrender and gets it.
His durable contribution is a body of prose that treats popular culture as worth the best available sentences, and a model of criticism as attention disciplined by memory. He never claimed to be right. He claimed that looking hard is a form of respect, that a film lies or tells the truth in its details, and that a reader who learns to catch the lie in a movie has learned something portable. The critic as gatekeeper died on his watch. The critic as writer, on the evidence of his run, did not.
Notes
Career dates, Sherborne, Trinity, Eliot graduate work, The Independent in 1989, Independent on Sunday in 1991, the five maxims, the Contact anecdote, the 2001 National Magazine Award pieces, Metacritic weighting, and the Lezard and Miller reviews come from Wikipedia on Anthony Lane.
The Remnick memo in full, including “wittiest and wisest,” the Updike champagne remark, Justin Chang‘s February 12 start, and the anniversary-issue final column, comes from IndieWire. See also The Hollywood Reporter and Deadline.
Wells reading the change as a demotion, including “senior stripes have been torn off,” comes from Hollywood Elsewhere.
The Birnbaum interview, source of the Friday-tickets volley, the no-tapes rule, the fact-checker line, and Lane’s speculation about why Tina Brown hired an outsider to Kael land, comes from Identity Theory.
Directors sending praise, including Spielberg, Anderson, and Linklater, and the Denby-as-chief-critic arrangement circa 2002, come from Chris Garcia’s Austin American-Statesman profile, archived here: “The New Yorker’s Anthony Lane”.
The Allison Pearson relationship, Cambridge home, the two children with birth months, and the wife/partner/former-partner inconsistency across sources come from Wikipedia on Allison Pearson, which now says “subsequently lived with”; Encyclopedia.com, which lists them as married and names the children as Evie and Thomas; and Kiddle, which says “former partner.” I flagged the inconsistency in the text rather than resolving it, since nothing on the record resolves it.
The skipped-breakfast detail before the 1993 Brown meeting comes via Grokipedia, citing Lane’s own account.
Recent post-2024 output, including the May 2025 New Yorker memoirs essay and the November 2025 Hopkins piece, comes from the same Grokipedia page and Lane’s New Yorker contributor page.
Extrapolations I made without links, which I take as self-evident: the character of Sherborne as an old boys’ boarding school and what that education stocks a boy with; the general erosion of critic gatekeeping between 1993 and 2024; the reading of the Eliot research as method rather than trivia; and the observation about Metacritic that an averaging algorithm weighting one critic amounts to a status fact.
How Anthony Lane’s Prose Works: A Style Analysis with a Reader-Response Account
Anthony Lane’s reviews outlive the films they cover. Readers who never saw Con Air still recall his sentences about it. That survival is the puzzle. A review is occasional writing, tied to a release date, built to be discarded with the newspaper. Lane’s reviews behave like literature instead. This essay takes the prose apart to see how it produces its effect, then turns to the reader, because the effect happens there. The knockout a Lane paragraph delivers is an event in the reader’s mind, engineered in advance by decisions about word order, register, allusion, and pace. Criticism of the style has to become criticism of the reading experience, which is why the second half of this essay draws on reader-response theory, the school that treats meaning as something a text does to a reader in time rather than something a reader extracts from a text at the end.
Start with syntax, because syntax is where Lane’s control shows first. English sentence structure gives a writer power over the moment of comprehension. A reader moving left to right cannot know what a sentence means until the sentence permits it. Lane exploits this. His signature construction is the periodic sentence with a delayed detonation: subordinate clauses stack up, the tone stays level, courtesies accumulate, and the payload arrives in the final position, where end-weight in English prosody already concentrates stress. The reader’s laugh coincides with the click of understanding because Lane has arranged for the two to arrive together. The joke does not decorate the meaning. The joke is the meaning, timed.
He alternates this long fuse with its opposite, the short sentence used as a splice. Film editing supplies the model. A Lane paragraph might run a sentence of sixty words through three registers and two allusions, then cut to four words. The cut carries the comedy the way a reaction shot carries a gag in silent film. The rhythm trains the reader within a paragraph or two. You learn to ride the long sentence with a mild dread of where it will land, and you learn that the short sentence is the trapdoor. His writing on Buster Keaton is more than subject matter. It is a description of his own method: composure, then the fall, with the face never changing.
Second, register. Lane works the full vertical range of literary English and gets his comedy from collisions between altitude and object. The lineage runs through the English mock-heroic: Alexander Pope (1688-1744) lavishing epic machinery on a stolen lock of hair in The Rape of the Lock, Edward Gibbon (1737-1794) draping irony over centuries of folly in balanced clauses, Max Beerbohm (1872-1956) and P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975) applying Edwardian polish to trivia, Evelyn Waugh reporting atrocity in the flattest of registers. Lane’s version applies the syntax of the Cambridge English essay, Latinate diction, subordination, allusion held lightly, to a Jerry Bruckheimer production. His run in the Con Air review, placing that film in a line of quiet Bergmanish pictures, works because the sentence’s manner belongs to a retrospective of Scandinavian art cinema and its object explodes convicts out of an airplane. The gap between manner and matter is the engine, and the reader measures the gap without being told to.
The traffic runs both ways, which distinguishes Lane from a mere ironist in a high collar. He can drop demotic bluntness on a sacred object as he raises cathedral prose over a dumb one. The most famous example is the shortest. Reviewing Revenge of the Sith in 2005, he took up the syntax of Yoda, the franchise’s fount of wisdom, and returned it as instruction: “Break me a fucking give.” Five words. The profanity does the work a paragraph of argument about the film’s bogus profundity might have done, and does it faster, because the obscenity lands inside the borrowed syntax, so the reader gets the parody and the verdict in one stroke. Note what the moment required: a critic willing to spend the magazine’s decorum, an editor willing to let him, and a readership trained to hear a violation of register as an argument. Remove any of the three and the line dies.
Third, the local devices. Lane runs a recognizable repertoire. The list that turns: three or four items in a series, the last of which betrays the series and retroactively poisons the others. The courteous knife: litotes and mock-deference, the “with all due respect” that precedes the incision, a manner descended from English committee prose and the dispatches of men trained to insult without actionable language. Understatement of this kind recruits the reader, because the writer declines to supply the outrage and the reader must generate it himself. The hypothetical scene: Lane invents a small drama, a studio meeting, a conversation between characters that the film never had the wit to write, and the invented scene convicts the film by contrast. The parodic riff: he catches a film’s idiom, its trailer voice or its screenplay cadences, and reproduces it a half-step off, the way a mimic destroys a politician with the politician’s own vowels. The pun, his most contested device: Laura Miller, praising the 2002 collection in The New York Times with a comparison of his prose to Astaire’s dancing, still flinched at the puns, and she had a case, since the pun is the one device in the kit that serves the writer’s pleasure ahead of the argument. And the closing pivot: a review that has run on comedy for a thousand words turns, in the last paragraph, toward an earned plainness about what films are for, and the reader, braced for one more swerve, gets sincerity instead, which lands harder for arriving against expectation.
Fourth, the persona, because devices need a speaker. The implied author of a Lane review is a specific construction: a man of enormous reading who declines to bully with it, a fan who confesses his appetites, a stylist who mocks his own body before he mocks anyone else’s work. The Contact anecdote from the introduction to Nobody’s Perfect, where he sprints sweating into a screening and misreads his own light-blinded notes, is persona-building of a high order. Self-deprecation buys license. A critic who wounds himself first has prepaid for the wounds he inflicts, and the reader extends him a credit he never extends to the critic who arrives invulnerable. David Remnick observed at Lane’s transition off the film desk in 2024 that the one artist Lane treats without mercy is himself. The observation names the strategy. It also names a truth about the strategy, which is that it works.
Now to the reader, and to the question of why the writing knocks a reader out rather than pleasing him. The theoretical tools exist. Reader-response criticism, in the line of Louise Rosenblatt (1904-2005), Wolfgang Iser (1926-2007), Stanley Fish (b. 1938), and Hans Robert Jauss (1921-1997), holds that a text is a set of instructions for an experience, and that the experience, unfolding in time, is the meaning. Fish’s early method, which he called affective stylistics, asked of every sentence a single question: what does this word, arriving now, do to the reader who has read the words before it and cannot see the words after it? The method fits Lane the way a glove fits a hand, because Lane composes at that grain. His sentences are choreographed reading experiences. The long periodic build creates a state in the reader, a suspension, a low hum of expectation, and the final word converts the state into a discharge. Laughter is the somatic register of that discharge. Incongruity theorists of humor from Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) to Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) describe the laugh as the mind’s response to an expectation resolved along the wrong axis, and a Lane sentence is a machine for producing that resolution on schedule. The knockout sensation is the click of comprehension arriving as surprise. Meaning as event, felt in the body.
Iser adds the second component: the gap. Iser argued that texts recruit readers through what they leave out, the blanks the reader must fill to make the text cohere, and that the reader’s deepest investment attaches to the meanings he built himself. Lane is a writer of gaps. He alludes without glossing. He places the Bergman reference, the Tennyson cadence, the Wilder echo, and walks on. The reader who catches the allusion completes a circuit, and the pleasure that follows contains a dose of self-congratulation, because the reader has just demonstrated his own cultivation to himself. This is the flattery at the heart of the Lane experience, and it should be named without cynicism, since every allusive style from Eliot down runs on it. The reviews make the reader feel like the person who gets it. The understatement works the same circuit at the level of judgment: Lane declines to say the film insults its audience, arranges the evidence, and lets the reader deliver the verdict, and the reader then holds the verdict with the conviction reserved for one’s own conclusions.
Fish’s later concept, the interpretive community, explains the social layer. A joke that requires the reader to know Bergman, hear a Yoda cadence, and tolerate an obscenity inside The New Yorker’s columns presupposes a community with shared equipment. Lane’s prose functions as a membership badge for that community. Reading him, and getting him, confirms the reader’s place inside a circle of the verbally quick and widely read, and the confirmation arrives weekly, on schedule, for the price of a subscription. Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) located laughter in sudden glory, the eruption of felt superiority, and there is sudden glory in the Lane transaction, structured as a triangle: the reader stands with the witty critic, above the pretentious film. The review sells a status experience. The reader gets to feel discerning without doing the discernment, because Lane has done it and invited him to co-sign. Stated this way the transaction sounds cheap, and in lesser hands it is; the genre of the snarky pan runs on the triangle with the wit removed. Lane escapes the cheapness because the superiority is earned by observation. His jokes double as evidence. The Yoda line is funny and is also a true claim about the screenplay’s syntax and the hollowness under it. When the laugh and the argument are the same object, the reader’s glory has a foundation, and the knockout differs in kind from the snicker a snark merchant produces.
Jauss supplies the historical frame. His horizon of expectations describes what a reader brings to a genre: the film review, as a genre, promises consumer guidance, a verdict, a thumb. Lane violated the horizon for thirty years. Rosenblatt’s distinction is useful here: she separated efferent reading, reading to carry information away, from aesthetic reading, reading lived through for the experience. The review is an efferent genre by charter. Lane converted it to an aesthetic one, and his readers, whatever they told themselves, read him aesthetically, which is why so many read reviews of films they had no intention of seeing and why the reviews survive the films. Each week the genre promised a service memo and delivered a comic essay, and the standing violation of the horizon was a standing gift. There is a final Jaussian turn inside his own work: once a reader internalizes the Lane horizon, expects the swerve, the drop, the courteous knife, the sincere passages break that horizon in the other direction. His writing on Keaton, on the Apollo photographs, on Wilder at the end of his life, moves readers out of proportion to its restraint, because the restraint arrives from a man who has taught you to brace for the joke. He rations earnestness the way a comic actor rations tears, and the rationing sets the price.
The costs of the method belong in the account, since the reader feels those too. A style this audible risks becoming its own subject. The standing charge against Lane, that the performance eclipses the film, that the joke arrives before the patience, describes a real failure state, and readers who sour on him sour at the moment they catch the machine anticipating. Once you can predict the swerve, the surprise dies, and with the surprise, the discharge; the trained reader can start hearing the fuse hiss before the sentence is half done. Lane manages the risk through variety, rotating joke architectures so no single fuse burns twice in a row, and through the sincerity ration, which resets expectation. The puns are where the management fails most often, since a pun serves no argument and depends on no observation. Miller saw that in 2002. The years since have not overturned her.
What, then, is the knockout? Compress the account and it comes to this. A Lane sentence engineers three recognitions to detonate together: the reader gets the joke, sees in the same instant that the joke is just, that it doubles as a true criticism of the object, and feels his own competence confirmed in the getting. Comprehension, judgment, and self-regard fire at once, on a timing set by word order, and the fusion registers in the body as delight. Most comic writers manage the first recognition. Most critics manage the second. The style that fuses all three at the point of a period is rare, and the writers who possess it, Sydney Smith (1771-1845) in the pulpit and the review, Clive James (1939-2019) at the television desk, Lane in the screening room, tend to be remembered past their occasions, because the reader does not store the information they conveyed. He stores the experience, and goes back for it.
