Yeah, just looking back at his movies, I think many more men are killed than women, numerically speaking, though we don't necessarily see them. For instance, think of all the John G.'s in Memento or all the Hugh Jackmans in The Prestige. Heh. Not that Nolan couldn't do better by women, but I agree with ita. There's a lot of killin'.
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I think one woman's character in "Inception" could have had more meat to it, but I am still going back and forth on whether that was intentional or not.
Isn't that something that applies to almost all the characters, though? And lends itself to one interpretation of the plot (not one I share)? Just the breakdown where the people are referred to as "The Mark" "The Forger" "The Point Man" "The Architect", etc, depersonalises them. And I think we only get into Cobb's head because he's the protagonist, Mal's head (inasmuch as we do) because she's the catalyst, and Fischer's head because he's the mark. Everyone else is similarly loosely drawn.
Yeah, just looking back at his movies, I think many more men are killed than women, numerically speaking, though we don't necessarily see them.
But it's not just a body count thing. It's the deaths of women as plot motivators.
In "Inception", I think some of the others are a bit more well-rounded in comparison to the one character. That character exists almost totally as the viewer's surrogate. Which is fine and all, but I wouldn't call any of the others quite that.
That character exists almost totally as the viewer's surrogate.
I think she functions more as a prod to the protagonist, honestly. I didn't feel she lasted very long as the person asking my questions, because she leapt very quickly to the one with the insights. And although I came out of it with a major crush on Arthur, I don't think I know anything more about him than I do about her. In fact, even if she is just a surrogate, that's more than Saito or Eames or Yusuf are. They're just job descriptions.
From le nubian's article:
He is a filmmaker for people who love plots.
Maybe that's why I love him so much!
A pretty interesting article. Worth a read if you've seen all his movies (as it spoils every single one of them).
right, P-C?
I love good plotting. I can forgive a whole lot if a movie gives me that.
The Descent has a male character killed early on just to give a female character angst & it passes the Bechdel test.
without looking at rotten tomatoes, which do you think has the lowest score of the three movies opening this weekend:
a) Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
b) The Expendables
c) eat, pray, love
answer: "c"
That's certainly what I hoped was the answer.
I have discovered that The Expendables was at least partially filmed in New Orleans, so go The Expendables.