Interstellar (Nolan)
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Goddamnit I tried to find common ground with you. Fuck this. Fuck you. Fuck Godzilla.
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Hahaha I'm sorry.Kaius wrote:Goddamnit I tried to find common ground with you. Fuck this. Fuck you. Fuck Godzilla.
- BurtReynolds
- An enigma of a man shaped hole in the wall between reality and the soul of the devil.
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- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Goddammit I wish I knew of an RMer that only dated black women so I could make a joke.BurtReynolds wrote:Fuck black holes.
- dimejinky99
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Thought this would get a solid endorsement on RM...still want to see it but i'm nervous now.
Calibrate your enthusiasm
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
I loved it, dime. Burt liked it too. LV is a silly goose.
- dimejinky99
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
I'd pay to see this again.
- Jorge
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
I see you guys had a productive evening
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
I really don't want to pick on LV, but rereading last knights discussion and I forgot all about how it started.
I mean, THIS.
I mean, THIS.
C'mon man.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Well, Gone Girl has been topped. Worst movie of the year, and one of the worst movies ever made.
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Just being honest, man.Kaius wrote:I really don't want to pick on LV, but rereading last knights discussion and I forgot all about how it started.
I mean, THIS.C'mon man.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Well, Gone Girl has been topped. Worst movie of the year, and one of the worst movies ever made.
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
He had me at
- Spoiler: show
(patriotic choking noises)
- dimejinky99
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
I was appalled by Gravity and got a lot of guff about it. The only beef i had was Bullock and Clooney...it would have been incredible had anyone else appeared in it..
we dont have to like everything i guess
we dont have to like everything i guess
Calibrate your enthusiasm
- Heathen
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Looks like someone has chosen to spend his life obsessively trying to solve the mystery of the disaster.
cutuphalfdead wrote:so glad i don't see signatures
- dimejinky99
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- Malloy
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
yesLoathedVermin72 wrote:BurtReynolds wrote:You never seem to say anything you say. What did you find cynical about it then, and if the cynicism wasn't from how it handled its themes, then what does it matter?LoathedVermin72 wrote:When did I say that the depiction of those themes was the cynical part? You're making a lot of assumptions about me and what I'm saying, man.BurtReynolds wrote:I think it's largely true science fiction, a term which has been watered down since Star Wars, but still exists. It is of course wrapped in other themes like family and love. Perhaps if LV didn't dismiss the depictions of those themes as cynical (as if that somehow invalidates them out of hand) he would see some depth or insight to them (and how insightful are they ever in movies anyway?. Maybe not.
- Spoiler: show
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
- McParadigm
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Ruminations on the pressures of entering adulthood, especially those focusing on young men, can very easily turn preachy. But by presenting the primary forces physically, delivering them as subtle allegorical constructs rather than as unremarkable emotional turmoil, Bay allows us to see Spike's catabasis manifested...and the results are surprising in very powerful ways.
The triumvirate is perfect: the Autobots represent a successful life, ripe with consumerism and its shiny and showy pleasures, as well as the difficult mature choices one must make in order to thrive within that system. Megan Fox is vapid and plasticine, yes, but this is actually what makes her perfect for the role. We don't want or welcome any characterization, because she is there solely for the function that delivers so well: to be a visual stand-in representative for the overwhelming physical and romantic urges that a boy becoming a man must face. And it is these urges that force Spike to make a change in his life, more than any robot (part of the brilliance of this film is that the other forces look so large and inescapable, but it is ultimately the girl that really matters). The Decepticons, warped and cruel, are the base violent urges all young men experience.
Bay does something truly novel by not having Spike feel temptation towards the Decepticons...most directors would pessimistically devote their story to showing a young man who DOES sometimes want that part of himself, in effect wanting to expose the weaknesses inherent to masculinity. But Bay goes noble, having his character reject it completely and devoting his film to the triumphant achievement of this impassioned rejection.
It is a movie about triumphing not just over the darkest part of yourself, but of the ease with which we all can make the choice.
The triumvirate is perfect: the Autobots represent a successful life, ripe with consumerism and its shiny and showy pleasures, as well as the difficult mature choices one must make in order to thrive within that system. Megan Fox is vapid and plasticine, yes, but this is actually what makes her perfect for the role. We don't want or welcome any characterization, because she is there solely for the function that delivers so well: to be a visual stand-in representative for the overwhelming physical and romantic urges that a boy becoming a man must face. And it is these urges that force Spike to make a change in his life, more than any robot (part of the brilliance of this film is that the other forces look so large and inescapable, but it is ultimately the girl that really matters). The Decepticons, warped and cruel, are the base violent urges all young men experience.
Bay does something truly novel by not having Spike feel temptation towards the Decepticons...most directors would pessimistically devote their story to showing a young man who DOES sometimes want that part of himself, in effect wanting to expose the weaknesses inherent to masculinity. But Bay goes noble, having his character reject it completely and devoting his film to the triumphant achievement of this impassioned rejection.
It is a movie about triumphing not just over the darkest part of yourself, but of the ease with which we all can make the choice.
(patriotic choking noises)
- Malloy
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
whatever lv has written in the past about other movies--and i'll admit, i haven't read his reviews or visited his site--doesn't diminish his argument about interstellar, which i quoted above and which no one has convincingly debunked. all i've seen is people appealing to "emotional" reactions, which are irrefutable and equally valid (and, as such, ultimately worthless).
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Ok, so let's talk directing/editing. I guess I don't technically know anything about the subject, but I think I may grasp the concept enough to know when something is well done and when it isn't. I'll mention a couple of moments that stand out to me, and you tell me why Nolan sucks.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Quick version: It's dripping in cynicism and pessimism (which is a huge pet peeve of mine), it's maudlin, it's pretentious (every line containing the word "love" in this movie made my eyes roll so hard they nearly fell out of their sockets), and it's one of the most mind-numbingly vapid, vacuous, and flat-out moronic things I've ever watched. If our future scientists and astronauts are as self-absorbed, hyper-emotional, incompetent, and driven by petty personal sentiment as the idiots in this movie, it's no wonder people like Nolan think we're all so fucked.E.H. Ruddock wrote:Expand on this, plz.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Well, Gone Girl has been topped. Worst movie of the year, and one of the worst movies ever made.
On top of that, it is shockingly poorly directed and edited; Nolan can't even seem to compose a sequence that makes basic geographical sense. There is also an utter lack of awe, majesty, and lyricism to the visuals (something Gareth Edwards certainly can't be accused of in Godzilla). This guy is the king of modern hacks.
These may be spoilers, maybe not, I don't know.
When Cooper drives away from the house, and as his pickup rumbles down the gravel road leaving a cloud of dust the rocket launch countdown begins, instead of with him seated in the shuttle. His true take-off was right there in that moment, and it was bittersweet for him. You could tell the pilot in him wanted to go, but he was gutted to leave his family, Murphy especially. Nolan took us directly from the seat of Coop's truck to the edge of Earth's atmosphere. I think a huge credit goes to McC again, but I thought the whole scene was really well put together.
I was impressed by all of the shots of the ship drifting through space, but I found the tension in the docking scenes to be absolutely riveting. When we think about space travel, naturally we are more inclined to imagine the dramatic view of huge planets, or the intensity of entering an atmosphere. It's easy to forget just how difficult even the most basic or boring tasks are. Both docking scenes were beautifully captured imo. On the last one I could almost feel the g-forces pinning me to my seat.
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
DO IT.dimejinky99 wrote:Local imax cinema has it...hmmmm