The city in
Se7en,
which is never identified specifically (and it drives me crazy because it feels like Philly and Chicago and L.A. rolled into one) is very much that sort of grim. A sort of Every City urban grimness, I guess.
For me, Gotham has always been New York, so it never occurred to me to wonder why people would want to leave. It also didn't feel very unrealistic to me, and I love New York.
People still live in Baltimore, and Detroit.
If you don't know what it's like to live somewhere else, it may be hard to imagine...it is for me and ours is a sunny, shiny, hell.
Good god, why do the Ted trailers totally captivate me? I swear I don't want to see it, but Ted is
exactly
the sort of annoying character I can enjoy, at least in the doses provided so far. I can't take the Zach Galifianakis bumbling offensive type. Shoot them in the knee and leave them in a rest stop.
(I watched some of Hangover II yesterday. This is fresh.)
Hangover II is like moviemaking crime, ita.
And not the way I like.
(I enjoyed the first one quite a lot.)
But to make the same movie plus added rude jokes about Asians,blah.
Asians and trans* people. I know it's stupid to pick a point in the movie and say "This! This is offensive!" It's Hangover. Two.
But...the lady boys subplot wasn't remotely funny for me.
I'd almost forgotten about that, ita.
I'd like to make a movie where we get revenge for Hangover II.
I don't enjoy everything, but it's been a long time since I felt actively used and insulted by an evening's entertainment.
Agh, Wikipedia is saying she passed just a few minutes ago.
I think I'm going to go dig up my copy of
Scribble Scribble
and bury myself in it for a bit.
There is a laundry list of reasons people stay in "sub-optimal" communities.
::raises hand:: Hell, I moved *to* one.