Interstellar (Nolan)
- E.H. Ruddock
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
I haven't seen the movie yet, but from reading this thread I can figure out two things I was hopeful for.
1. There are no cool aliens in this movie.
2. When traveling through the wormhole they didn't play "Intergalactic" by the Beastie Boys.
Very disappointing.
1. There are no cool aliens in this movie.
2. When traveling through the wormhole they didn't play "Intergalactic" by the Beastie Boys.
Very disappointing.
Clouuuuds Rolll byyy...BANG BANG BANG BANG
- Dev
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Michael Caine is in it.E.H. Ruddock wrote:I haven't seen the movie yet, but from reading this thread I can figure out two things I was hopeful for.
1. There are no cool aliens in this movie.
Very disappointing.
- spike
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
no intelligent lifeforms on distant planets and reluctance to include top notch party music; further evidence of nolan's pessimism and cynicism running rampant.E.H. Ruddock wrote:I haven't seen the movie yet, but from reading this thread I can figure out two things I was hopeful for.
1. There are no cool aliens in this movie.
2. When traveling through the wormhole they didn't play "Intergalactic" by the Beastie Boys.
Very disappointing.
- McParadigm
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
It also focuses on stupid things like character interaction and dramatic storytelling when it could be lingering on pictures of spacey stuff.
(patriotic choking noises)
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
This was a huge missed opportunity.E.H. Ruddock wrote:2. When traveling through the wormhole they didn't play "Intergalactic" by the Beastie Boys.
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Kaius
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
SHOW ME URANUS, FOR THE LOVE OF SPACE!McParadigm wrote:It also focuses on stupid things like character interaction and dramatic storytelling when it could be lingering on pictures of spacey stuff.
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Kaius
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- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
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- BurtReynolds
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
quotacolypse warning ahead:
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- VinylGuy
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Saw it yesterday, and i liked it...really interesting theories around...
BUT...
yeah, there are some classic Nolan plot holes.
BUT...
yeah, there are some classic Nolan plot holes.
BONE FUCKIN´ TOMAHAWK.
- Alex
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
i wish i could tap some sense into LV through his bookcase
Malloy wrote:making this place inhospitable to posting is really the only move left.
- Alex
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
11/10McParadigm wrote: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.
Malloy wrote:making this place inhospitable to posting is really the only move left.
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Let me ask you this: would it be an unfair criticism if an atheist watches God’s Not Dead or Heaven is for Real and says it’s a bullshit movie because they don’t buy into its perspective? Perspective is important. Sure, I could go around and just try to make myself into some objective automaton judging movies in an ideological vacuum, ignoring how I feel about society, people, the world, reality, etc. But I have no interest in doing that because movies don’t exist in a vacuum; they’re part of that world.BurtReynolds wrote:We probably do have differing world views, the difference is that I don't demand a movie conform to my world view in order for it to be considered good. I wouldn't call an otherwise fine movie "worst movie ever" just because I disagree with a worldview (if it even actively promotes one or i guess it correctly). Maybe I'm misreading, but it seems you do this ALL THE TIME.
An individual’s perspective and worldview is what makes them unique, what gives them something to say, and I think those perspectives should be brought to and valued in film criticism and art analysis, not coldly excluded and belittled.
Dude I agree with all of this so goddamn much, especially the bolded part. Why must we fight?BurtReynolds wrote:That wasn't meant in the usual "if you don't like it, make your own" way (i agree, its stupid). I actually meant that literally. I'd be interested in that. I welcome more voices, as opposed to the modern day, internet shame brigade's constant need to condemn and shame not just art and artists, but fans of those artists as well (which amounts to de facto censorship IMO).
Though if you think that, isn’t it a little contradictory to give me such a hard time for my opinions sometimes? I dunno. Just a thought.
And I’m working my way towards getting my own movies made, believe you me.
- McParadigm
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
But those are just really, really shitty movies, LV. It's a Wonderful Life, What Dreams May Come, Wristcutters, Life of Brian, Last Temptation of Christ, and Meet Joe Black also rely on premises that don't jive with atheism. Do you assume atheists hate all of those?LoathedVermin72 wrote:Let me ask you this: would it be an unfair criticism if an atheist watches God’s Not Dead or Heaven is for Real and says it’s a bullshit movie because they don’t buy into its perspective? Perspective is important.
(patriotic choking noises)
- Alex
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
oh snap
Malloy wrote:making this place inhospitable to posting is really the only move left.
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
There’s a difference between a film taking something for granted as part of reality and using something for other purposes. I used the examples I did because those are films that take God’s existence for granted. They take the truth of Christianity for granted. They treat them as real, true elements of reality. On the other hand, It’s a Wonderful Life is a fantasy that uses elements of Christian mythology as part of that fantasy. Same for WDMC. Life of Brian is a satire that is largely about ridiculing the absurdity of religion. TLTOC is a very questioning, probing film that deeply upset a lot of Christians when it came out. Haven’t seen the others so I can’t comment.McParadigm wrote:But those are just really, really shitty movies, LV. It's a Wonderful Life, What Dreams May Come, Wristcutters, Life of Brian, Last Temptation of Christ, and Meet Joe Black also rely on premises that don't jive with atheism. Do you assume atheists hate all of those?LoathedVermin72 wrote:Let me ask you this: would it be an unfair criticism if an atheist watches God’s Not Dead or Heaven is for Real and says it’s a bullshit movie because they don’t buy into its perspective? Perspective is important.
The problem for me with Interstellar’s cynicism and pessimism was that it wasn’t exploring anything about them or using them to explore anything else – it just treated them as an inevitable part of the narrative. It took them for granted as just being true. And when a movie does that, it’s credibility tends to collapse for me. And, like I said earlier, in this case, it exploded into boring ridiculousness.
Last edited by LoathedVermin72 on Mon November 10, 2014 7:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Alex
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
we used to wonder about our place in the stars, now we just chud and thodoks
Malloy wrote:making this place inhospitable to posting is really the only move left.
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Alex wrote:we used to wonder about our place in the stars, now we just chud and thodoks
- BurtReynolds
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Re: Interstellar (Nolan)
Thodoks is out there somewhere, waiting for us to save him.
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