I liked Pulp Fiction, but I didn't love it. Much of the time, I love the concept of non-linear narratives, so that aspect was going to pre-dispose me to enjoying the film.
Otherwise, I didn't see what the big deal with the film was. I did want to know if Harvey Keitel went through a "cleaner" period in his acting career because he sure knows how to play that role.
I adore Pulp Fiction. It managed to wrap a pretty fierce morality tale in a flashy cinematic playground--and both worked.
wrod.
Jackie Brown was good too, but since then? we've grown estranged.
I really hate the facile nihilism of Trainspotting or, for that matter, Fight Club, especially when that sort of adolescent anti-philosophy is glorified as if it were actually about something.
That is the complete opposite of how I see those movies. For me, they expose the non-utility of nihilism while accepting that the superficial appeal is actually appealing.
That is the complete opposite of how I see those movies. For me, they expose the non-utility of nihilism while accepting that the superficial appeal is actually appealing.
Very well put. That's exactly how I feel about those two movies. I think that can come across to people as trying to have it both ways, but I didn't ultimately feel that way in either of those cases.
Dear Disney -
Return to Oz.
All I'm sayin.
Wait - I'm also saying shut your piehole.
Luv - The Empress.
I realized recently that the last four movies I saw in a theater were Dark Knight, Terminator: Salvation, Surrogates, and Inglourious Basterds. So I'm into... explosions.
ME TOO!
I love
Fight Club.
I am mixed on Kubrick, I think. I love
Dr. Strangelove
and
A Clockwork Orange,
but I'm with Amy on
The Shining,
I didn't "get"
2001,
and I have no idea what I was supposed to get out of
Eyes Wide Shut.
I have no idea what I was supposed to get out of Eyes Wide Shut.
Well, possibly a hilarious critique of Tom Cruise's closeted life, but I'm not sure how official that was in Kubrick's agenda.
I have no idea what I was supposed to get out of Eyes Wide Shut.
I think the "Here's something humans do. Isn't that interesting/funny/terrible?" thing applies.
All this had me poking around on the Kubrick site for a while tonight, and this seemed relevant to the misanthropy discussion:
[A]s Kubrick himself remarked to Gene Siskel, "You don't have to make Frank Capra movies to like people."