Third Eye Film Society Forum Index
Author Message

<  Third Eye Film Forums  ~  Couch With A View

Syd
Posted: Tue May 10, 2011 11:02 am Reply with quote
Site Admin Joined: 21 May 2004 Posts: 12944 Location: Norman, Oklahoma
Supposedly they were originally going to have the humans used for their brains' computing power, but decided that would be too complicated for our little heads and opted for stupidity.

_________________
Rocky Laocoon foretold of Troy's doom, only to find snaky water. They pulled him in and Rocky can't swim. Now Rocky wishes he were an otter!
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
knox
Posted: Tue May 10, 2011 11:27 am Reply with quote
Joined: 18 Mar 2010 Posts: 1246 Location: St. Louis
Bad science is always entertaining. Even the original concept that was scrapped....like, they can cross interstellar space and subjugate an entire planet, but they can't manufacture a decent microchip? If Graham's Law makes sense elsewhere, seems like any society around long enough to travel between the stars would have reached a point where a biological brain would be far less efficient than hardware.
View user's profile Send private message
bartist
Posted: Tue May 10, 2011 7:12 pm Reply with quote
Joined: 27 Apr 2010 Posts: 6967 Location: Black Hills
A few films manage not to bite off too much concept...maybe the most successful cyberspace thriller is The Thirteenth Floor, in which some tech company creates a simulation of 1937 Los Angeles inside a computer. You get a murder mystery, kind of like a really good holodeck episode on ST:NG, and Gretchen Mol, turning up the heat.

Worst cyber-movie: Lawnmower Man. This enters a realm of campy fun, with all the pleasures one might find in an Ed Wood movie.

_________________
He was wise beyond his years, but only by a few days.
View user's profile Send private message
Joe Vitus
Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 5:23 am Reply with quote
Joined: 20 May 2004 Posts: 14498 Location: Houston
The Truman Show got it 100% wrong. It's (outdated) Orwellian fantasy pictured a world in which lack of privacy is viewed as violation by the man watched. He has no idea he's watched. Realizing it, he sees himself as a victim and walks out, though he's offered everything to keep going. It pictures a society wholely voyeuristic but obsessively non-exibitionistic.

But the frightening thing about our contemporary world is not that it is one where people are the innocent dupes of invasive media. No one has to hide a camera or coerce a participant. It is a world in which the average person feels his life is meaningless unless millions of strangers observe it incessantly. People sign on for reality shows, put their sex lives on the net, and tell the most personal things about themselves to (hopefully) millions of strangers on blogs, e-journals and Facebook. It's it's all about hits, hits hits. Are people watching? Are a lot of people watching? Then life has meaning. The opposite of unwilling, they essentially can't be stopped from displaying either the most private or the worst, or both, aspects of themselves for a massive audience.

Making The Truman Show the most inaccurate societal critique ever.

_________________
You've got a great brain. You should keep it in your head.

-Topher
View user's profile Send private message
billyweeds
Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 5:38 am Reply with quote
Joined: 20 May 2004 Posts: 20618 Location: New York City
Joe--Excellent. I've never thought of it that way, but you're right on.

Though, to be totally fair, the world was different at the time The Truman Show was made, and not so steeped in "reality shows." The movie had a point to make; my problem was that it made it in such a boring and mediocre fashion, and tangentially, that it was so well received by critics who should have known better.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Joe Vitus
Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 6:22 am Reply with quote
Joined: 20 May 2004 Posts: 14498 Location: Houston
Thanks. Quite true about the times being different, but in terms of predicting the zeitgeist, it seemed to look back rather than forward.

_________________
You've got a great brain. You should keep it in your head.

-Topher
View user's profile Send private message
bartist
Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 9:12 am Reply with quote
Joined: 27 Apr 2010 Posts: 6967 Location: Black Hills
Joe, your analysis of our tweety world is brilliant -- my daughter has a friend who will send her messages like "I'm fixing a sandwich with albacore tuna." The exhibitionism is often an exhibit of the dully quotidian, bordering on vacuous. Never have so many shared so much of so little real interest.

And though TTS may have missed the current trend, I think it did get a piece of it, in the scenes where we see people fascinated by all the boring petty details of Truman's life. The sly joke of the movie is that so many people would stick with the show, that voyeurs would stay at the window to observe the most ordinary and tedious parts of life. I agree the film isn't predictive, but I think it was a funny look at the times and the thin gruel that is pop culture.

_________________
He was wise beyond his years, but only by a few days.
View user's profile Send private message
marantzo
Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 10:20 am Reply with quote
Guest
The Thirteenth Floor was a good movie. Very overlooked.
Joe Vitus
Posted: Wed May 11, 2011 8:05 pm Reply with quote
Joined: 20 May 2004 Posts: 14498 Location: Houston
bartist wrote:
Joe, your analysis of our tweety world is brilliant -- my daughter has a friend who will send her messages like "I'm fixing a sandwich with albacore tuna." The exhibitionism is often an exhibit of the dully quotidian, bordering on vacuous. Never have so many shared so much of so little real interest.

And though TTS may have missed the current trend, I think it did get a piece of it, in the scenes where we see people fascinated by all the boring petty details of Truman's life. The sly joke of the movie is that so many people would stick with the show, that voyeurs would stay at the window to observe the most ordinary and tedious parts of life. I agree the film isn't predictive, but I think it was a funny look at the times and the thin gruel that is pop culture.


Thanks much. I did like the "product placement" in Truman's life.

_________________
You've got a great brain. You should keep it in your head.

-Topher
View user's profile Send private message
bartist
Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 9:16 am Reply with quote
Joined: 27 Apr 2010 Posts: 6967 Location: Black Hills
Finally saw ILYPM -- like a darker, fiercer take on the basic "Catch Me If You Can" theme. As a Lebowski fan, I enjoyed all the Jackie Treehorn doodles, of course. Certainly an acting showpiece for both Carrey and McGregor, and just insanely funny at times. As for the con artistry twist in the latter part of the film, somehow it really caught me off guard. If this is based on a true story, I can well understand that a filmmaker would have found it impossible to resist. And the influence of the Coen bros is unmistakably there.

By far the best comedy of 2010.

_________________
He was wise beyond his years, but only by a few days.
View user's profile Send private message
carrobin
Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 8:35 pm Reply with quote
Joined: 21 May 2004 Posts: 7795 Location: NYC
"ILYPM" is very funny in places but broke my heart, too. My friend David finally saw it but didn't like it much, saying it was unbelievable. I told him that the most unbelievable things in it were the most factual sequences; there was an article in Entertainment Weekly about Steven Russell, and I only wish I could read the original book. (Out of print, even on Amazon--I can't believe it wasn't reprinted when the film came out.) The guy was brilliant, reckless, fearless, addicted to risk, and totally devoted to Phillip. (Phillip is living in Florida, and sometimes writes to Steven in prison, but hasn't visited.)
View user's profile Send private message
gromit
Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 11:05 pm Reply with quote
Joined: 31 Aug 2004 Posts: 9016 Location: Shanghai
Interestingly, just because something is factual doesn't make it believable in a fiction film. A lot depends on the presentation and the context. Outlandish real events can come across as contrived or phony in a film without great care in the telling. Often times I wish they toned down or altered the real event so that it worked better in a fictive environment (not for a well known historic event though). What is included or excluded in a film is of course crucial.

_________________
Killing your enemies, if it's done badly, increases their number.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Syd
Posted: Thu May 12, 2011 11:45 pm Reply with quote
Site Admin Joined: 21 May 2004 Posts: 12944 Location: Norman, Oklahoma
Prey for Rock and Roll. The travails of an all-woman punk rock band led by a Joan-Jettish Jacki (Gina Gershon) and Faith (Lori Petty who reminded me strongly of Annette Benning if she'd become a punk-rock lesbian). Drea de Matteo is drugged out bassist Tracy and Shelly Cole is young Sally who is Faith's lover. Marc Blucas is Sally's brother Animal who is just out of prison for manslaughter of his stepfather who Animal killed for raping Sally. Animal alarms people and has the good sense not to spread it too widely that Sally called him that after the character in Sesame Street.

There some charming humor like that and a lot of melodrama. I think it was a mistake to have Gershon do voiceover narration, and, to tell the truth, she's not a great singer, which may help explain why Jacki's been rocking for more than twenty years without landing a record contract. To be fair, Jacki's not supposed to be a great singer. There are still a couple of good songs.

Fortunately, Gershon makes up for that when she gets a chance to act, and I liked Lori Petty a lot, too. I warmed to her in a way I never have to Benning. In a way, Jacki and Faith are mother and father to the band. I thought Cole and Blucas were fine too, but de Matteo couldn't do much with Tracy.

To tell the truth, The Runaways has made this film superfluous.

_________________
Rocky Laocoon foretold of Troy's doom, only to find snaky water. They pulled him in and Rocky can't swim. Now Rocky wishes he were an otter!
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
Syd
Posted: Fri May 13, 2011 5:25 pm Reply with quote
Site Admin Joined: 21 May 2004 Posts: 12944 Location: Norman, Oklahoma
On the last song, de Matteo does the least convincing fake playing of a string instrument I've seen in quite a while.

_________________
Rocky Laocoon foretold of Troy's doom, only to find snaky water. They pulled him in and Rocky can't swim. Now Rocky wishes he were an otter!
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
whiskeypriest
Posted: Mon May 16, 2011 12:15 pm Reply with quote
Joined: 20 May 2004 Posts: 6916 Location: "It's a Dry Heat."
Saw Amreeka the other night. Pretty good movie about a Palestinian woman who emigrates to the US with her son at the time of Gulf War 2, and settles into what is supposed to be Illinois but looks like some vacant, soulless prairie Hellscape. Hi gary! Battle against discrimination and homesickness and the foreignness of life here. Funny, touching, etc. etc. etc.

Had one moment that had both my wife and me in stitches: the woman is awoken one morning by a panicked call from her mother in Palestine: She'd seen on the news that there was an earthquake in California! "Are you all right?" she asks. Ayup. My wife still gets that sort of thing from her family. You'd be surprised how foreign the vastness of this continent is to people who have never been here.

_________________
I ask you, Velvel, as a rational man, which of us is possessed?
View user's profile Send private message

Display posts from previous:  

All times are GMT - 5 Hours
Page 1955 of 2427
Goto page Previous  1, 2, 3 ... 1954, 1955, 1956 ... 2425, 2426, 2427  Next
Post new topic

Jump to:  

You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum