0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 18947 times.
I thought I explained the violence - it sells tickets. Fresh and clean wholesome films generally don't do well in our market. Americans crave sensationalistic crap. Desperate housewives and people being fired get our motors running. Goofy gays and clowning blacks keep our condescension on track. We worship the wealthy and like to fantasize about being them. We dig brutal hits in football and crashes in NASCAR. We're avid about hospital dramas and police sanctification murder investigations. Does anybody else think it unlikely that cops take a personal interest in every victim and discuss them on a first name basis? We are nutso as a society. I think, given what idiots we are, that QT shows great restraint and, if anything, treats us with more respect than we earn. Roll it.
I believe this is the best discussion I've seen in AC. Thanks Tom and Kevin and Mr Clark and droht and aj and whomever I missed. Our hobby can be and often is so self indulgent and gratutious and so many discussions really reflect this. Not so this time, thanks you guys.
re:The movie in question - The Germans' most high profile character in the film was as cold and sadistic as Hannibal Lector. The Brad Pitt character was a heartless basterd. Both were calculating and evil to the core. Pitt, however, had the benefit of playing for the good guys.One was spit and polish military precision. The other was a renegade loose cannon. The other less visible faction was the French Resistance. They, of course, would be viewed as terrorists or insurgents by the Germans. What is the difference between a soldier and a terrorist? Methods? Uniforms? Funding? Government sanction? Righteous cause?Do you seriously view a movie such as Inglorious Basterds as propaganda? Do you see the violence in this film as somehow worse than that which you might encounter in a murder mystery or a slasher flick?I enjoyed it tremendously for the fact that it encourages thoughtful discussion. I'm glad you are here to disagree. We were getting way too many Amen!!s and too few WTFs.
Definitely agree! Aside from the times when I wish the cinema forum were a bit more active
The fact that a Tarantino movie can engender this level of intellectual debate and discussion is very interesting...
The discussion leaves the realm of black and white, good and bad, and starts to gravitate toward analysis, evaluation, symbolic references, critical content, personal reflection, individuals values, fears, and hopes. There is a bonding where competition and dick measurements normally reign supreme. There is a recognition that we may share something more than specifications or dealer loyalty. We find each other and, in that, find something about ourselves we rather like. We grew a little.
Obviously, Mr. Haskins is a man of superior breeding and sensitivity, a man of carefully weighed thought and excellent intellect.
I make the same argument about the movie. It my be artistic in terms of expression of thoughts. Any artistic value it holds though is overshadowed by the fact that it crosses the line of decency. Its primary function is to allow the viewer to vicariously enjoy the act of murder and torture.
We also watch "Paranormal Activity" the other day and we both thought, how stupid! What a dumb movie and not scary either!
Pure nonsense. Thankfully you're not the U.S. Censor General. Steve
As Huey Newton said, "Violence is as American as apple pie."We have the highest murder rate of first world countries and our prisons are overflowing.QT is simply tapping into this ready made market and making mega bucks doing it. Perhaps this trivialization of violence is an offshoot of the computer gaming culture where violence is just part of the game. Hey, we love it. The great hit that the football safety puts on a receiver that almost takes his head off is applauded by millions although few think of the toll that multiple hits have on the human brain.Maybe QT is of the culture that thinks violence is cool and very entertaining. Also its a good way to prepare our youth for the video wars of the future where the warriors will wreak their havoc from their comfortable computer terminals in bomb proof structures and sending drones out to slaughter civilians in tit for tat terrorism. Hey that's an idea for a movie $$$$$ -Roy
Kevin - You're blaming the messenger. Art mirrors life. Artists are our playback system. They show us what we look and sound like. We are what we are. Either we own up and change or live with the image we created. You are advocating showing the world a sanitized, P.C. version of who we are. Speaking of movies, maybe "Bowling For Columbine" should be the next one we take on. It addresses your concerns in a way that is roundly rejected by every red-blooded John Wayne wannabe in America. Does might make right - or not? Does our military presence in foreign countries help or hurt our image? Does it support or contradict the impressions you feel our films implant?Bob Marley sang about One World because he was wise enough to see that we all share the same planet and that political boundaries were a vane and dishonest construct intended to benefit the few at the expense of the many.Under this belief, patriotism can be argued to be counterproductive. Declaration of War comes as rationalized imperative by the aggressor and a matter of survival for the defender. When have our boundaries ever been genuinely threatened? It was a long time ago and when it ceased to be a problem, we fought a war among ourselves. Like I said earlier, we are nuckin futs. We just can't be peaceful. My wish is to live my life as neither predator nor prey. As human beings we should be able to rise to that level, but we are too easily led to battle and hatred by social dividers. We can't seem to get it through our heads that average schmuck in Iraq or Mexico or Afghanistan or China just wants what we want - a peaceful world of safety for his family and a full rice bowl.
This thread motivated me to re-watch Kill Bill 2 last night, which has been sitting on the DVR for a while. Great flick. Not for you though Kevin.