what can a poor boy do

Mar 20, 2006 05:20

Every once in a while, a film comes along that I'm not expecting. This is no small task, considering that much of my social life is planned around movie release schedules. More to the point, however, I love finding movies I wasn't planning on going to see originally and I love it even more when they turn out to be really good.

Case in point: V ( Read more... )

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Comments 6

stevencwatts March 21 2006, 01:03:03 UTC
Thanks for the mention, but I think you may be oversimplifying my point. I didn't want (or expect) the movie to hand all of my answers to me. I just thought that it grazed the surface in ways that, while the audience could find depth, I wasn't convinced it was entirely present in the film itself. To me, this had the depth of, say, Matrix Reloaded. A bit, a few interesting questions, but not mind-blowingly so. I would've felt more comfortable if the movie had at least attempted to point out that V might not be a hero, that his actions might not be right, that the ends don't justify the means. I think all of those things you got out of it aren't things the movie presented, but rather things that you inferred from it. Congratulations on giving it more depth than it could give itself ( ... )

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wattsu March 21 2006, 03:27:14 UTC
But surely there has to be something there in the first place for me to infer something more from it. That's the great thing about art - it's inherently subjective. Like I said, everyone is going to come away from this movie feeling something different. You and I did not have the same experience - we can agree on a lot of things, but we came away with different experiences and conclusions. Art means different things to different people, and it's as much a reflection of the beholder as it is a force unto itself ( ... )

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stevencwatts March 21 2006, 04:19:10 UTC
Really? I didn't see a seed. V was a hero. Period. I was never convinced that the movie put forth a genuine effort to explore his character from more than one angle. And given the fact that the entire movie focussed on his character, you would think they would have had plenty of time to slip in a line or two.

Anyway, yes, art is subjective. I'm happy you found depth in it. I'm not arguing that people can't get depth, I'm commenting that the movie had very little of its own to offer. I can look at Duchamp's "Fountain" for hours and get tons of meaning out of it. Tons of art critics, scholars and students do this every day. (Trust me, I minored in Art History ( ... )

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wattsu March 21 2006, 06:01:07 UTC
We can argue about this all night, but ultimately it comes back to the same thing: I took something different away from it than you did. Neither of us is wrong ( ... )

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