Do I take it the chick flick/family movie marathon and the severe action-movie withdrawal are related? Far be it from me to presume I can suggest better action movies than your brother (I'm the one to go to for horror movie suggestions). However, should you find yourself in a position to see more chick flicks, see if you can leverage your way to watching some of Nora Ephron's work (i.e. Sleepless in Seattle, You've Got Mail, and Julie & Julia). She directs some very stylish films which, unlike many of her peers, avoid overloading on cuteness, fluffiness, frivolity, and a general tendency toward manufactured sentimentality. Consequently, the deep emotions that are in her films feel much more authentic, rich, and rewarding.shade of dae (post: 1346778) wrote:Recently my family has been watching nothing but chick flick/ family movies. So, thus far I've seen Kung-Fu Panda, which was amusing but not hilarious, Confessions of a Shopaholic, which was a good fluff movie, although the moving mannequins were very creepy, Twilight, which I saw with some friends who loved it, so for their sake I had to refrain from laughing (too much), and Enchanted, which was good, but not neccessarily great.
I am going through severe action-movie withdrawal right now.
GhostontheNet (post: 1346788) wrote:Do I take it the chick flick/family movie marathon and the severe action-movie withdrawal are related? Far be it from me to presume I can suggest better action movies than your brother (I'm the one to go to for horror movie suggestions). However, should you find yourself in a position to see more chick flicks, see if you can leverage your way to watching some of Nora Ephron's work (i.e. Sleepless in Seattle, You've Got Mail, and Julie & Julia). She directs some very stylish films which, unlike many of her peers, avoid overloading on cuteness, fluffiness, frivolity, and a general tendency toward manufactured sentimentality. Consequently, the deep emotions that are in her films feel much more authentic, rich, and rewarding.
Yeah, I know! Why can't there be more explosions in chick flicks? All you'd have to do is equip the ladies with hand grenades, and ticket and DVD sales would go sky high. It would be simple enough to work into the script. "Sorry Jason, we can't be friends anymore, you hurt my feelings when you told me I should get more exercise. Now kneel down and beg for mercy, or eat shrapnel." "But I thought you liked Richard Simmons!" Male members of the audience wouldn't know whether to be delighted or terrified, and hand grenades would become the hottest new accessory. Nora Ephron is savvy about this stuff. She has Tom Hanks and his friend cry over a hand grenade in a war picture after accusing women of being too teary-eyed and sentimental with romance films. But in the meantime, I suppose we will have to content ourselves with explosions in action films of greater or lesser intelligence.shade of dae (post: 1346903) wrote:Yeah, with all the chick flicks my family has been watching, after a while, I just really want to watch something blow up. You're right though, Nora Ephron's movies are very good, as far as I've seen. Sleepless in Seattle was one of my favorite movies when I was a kid, as well as You've Got Mail and I don't know how many times I've seen them. However, I've borrowed Tomb Raider: Cradle of Life from a friend and I need to watch it soon so I can return it to her. I'm hoping it's more intelligent than the last one, or if it isn't, at least be as hilariously over-the-top.
It is pretty good, isn't it? I'm glad to have Session 9 in my collection.ShiroiHikari (post: 1347192) wrote:Last night I watched Session 9, a psychological thriller. I was pretty impressed.
GhostontheNet (post: 1347368) wrote:Tonight I watched 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Well, suffice to say, a lot of stuff went down in 1968, and a lot of narrative-shifting Rubicon films came out that year. In the horror genre, for example, 1968 saw Rosemary's Baby and Night of the Living Dead, two films that revolutionized the genre by removing temporal and geographical distance from contemporary settings to make them the site of horror, blurring the boundaries between monster and family until the two became more or less indistinguishable, and assigning an adversarial or incompetent role to patriarchal authority figures formerly regarded as potent to stop the monster and restore the status quo. Needless to say, that opened up many new possibilities for social critique in the horror genre, as quite a number of critics since Robin Wood have agreed. In regard to 2001: A Space Odyssey, I think the film does an excellent job of capturing the anticipation and anxiety of the period. It is indeed one of the most terrifying and exciting movies I have ever seen. The famous Stargate sequence is often noted to have had a deep resonance with the counterculture, who were experimenting with drugs to challenge mainstream Western values and ideologies. But where many Christians have taken the Reaganite view that counterculture is dangerous, and its influence is to be stifled, I think Francis Schaeffer was wiser than his monstrous progeny when he said that the counterculture was asking the right questions, but not finding the right answers. (For more information about Francis Schaeffer and counterculture, read this article from Ship of Fools.)ich1990 (post: 1347488) wrote:I am curious, what did you think of this movie? Personally, this movies popularity seems to me to be like a case of "The Emperor's New Clothes". Everybody says this is one of the best movies of all time, etc., etc. I seem to be one of the few people who thoroughly disliked it. Maybe in the '60s this was cutting edge cinematography, but those monkey suits didn't age well.
GhostontheNet (post: 1347500) wrote:In regard to 2001: A Space Odyssey, I think the film does an excellent job of capturing the anticipation and anxiety of the period. It is indeed one of the most terrifying and exciting movies I have ever seen. The famous Stargate sequence is often noted to have had a deep resonance with the counterculture
At first glance, 2001: A Space Odyssey may seem threatening to Christians insofar as it uses evolutionary themes to pose the question as to whether life has meaning... One of the central images of the film is the ancient technological monolith, which is tall, thin, black, book-like, and serves as the medium of transmission of an advanced civilization. This we may take as Holy Scripture...
No, the sequence goes cave-dwellers, screaming match with rival band of cave-dwellers, contemplative caveman discovers you can use bones to crack bones, cave-dwellers' hunting becomes more secure, cave-dwellers use bones as implement for preserving established order by beating challenger to death, cave-dwellers become more secure in their environment, cave-dwellers find this security severely unsettled by the unexplained appearance of a giant monolith, cave-dwellers carry out war of domination against rival band. The relation of the monolith to the cave-dwellers, then, is to severely unsettle their sense of security and superiority in their environment, a sense reinforced by the introduction of a score repeated throughout the film that is as ominous as it is elegiac and apocalyptic. At this stage in the game, the only thing the monolith reveals is its presence, which is alarming enough to trigger a period of anxiety. If we are to read between the lines and view these scenes from the alien perspective, the monolith is sent to earth to establish that there is sentient life there. Once this is established, the monolith is sent up to the moon and buried there like a giant cosmic cookie jar for such a time as humans have sufficient technology to reach it. The probe's detection of radio technology used in its vicinity is enough to trigger a transmission of its own, and so the plot thickens.ich1990 (post: 1347561) wrote:My dislike for the movie stems from its absurdity and lack of style more than any percieved anti-Christian values. That being said, wasn't it the Monolith that taught the cavemen how to kill and dominate each other? If the Monolith is supposed to represent communication with God, then it seems that this movie isn't pro-Christian at all.
GhostontheNet (post: 1347569) wrote:No, the sequence goes cave-dwellers, screaming match with rival band of cave-dwellers, contemplative caveman discovers you can use bones to crack bones, cave-dwellers' hunting becomes more secure, cave-dwellers use bones as implement for preserving established order by beating challenger to death, cave-dwellers become more secure in their environment, cave-dwellers find this security severely unsettled by the unexplained appearance of a giant monolith, cave-dwellers carry out war of domination against rival band.
I'm not sure where you're coming from in accusing the film of absurdity and a lack of style. Certainly, 2001: A Space Odyssey is as stylized a film as any other work by Stanley Kubrick, who was a highly stylized director. The film is ingenious for using a narrative of space exploration to dramatically reconfigure "the possibilities of cinematic space and form for the general public." (David J. Skal, The Monster Show: A Cultural History of Horror Revised Edition p. 39) Suddenly, all those stabilizing rules they taught you in film school no longer apply in zero gravity, but Kubrick uses this to great effect to unsettle the audience in a sustained way. For our generation, this film has been so widely imitated and parodied that we often don't realize what an initial effect it had until we look at the science fiction films before it, and realize what a quantum leap it was for the genre. As for absurdity, I'm not sure what exactly you find absurd, so I can't comment on this.
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