'Children of Men', the new Alfonso Cuaron sci-fi flick

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not v useful but i vaguely recall reading abt 50 pages of the book and thinking it was p bad

johnny crunch, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 16:42 (nine years ago)

xp What films would you be comparing it to?

Andrew Farrell, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 16:44 (nine years ago)

stallone being a big dummy action man is one of the main reasons hes so affecting in copland

loudmouth darraghmac ween (darraghmac), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:18 (nine years ago)

it's not a great movie or anything but it's a solid little crime movie

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:21 (nine years ago)

dirty fingernails/against type is catnip to people. i don't know why. look, they're acting! awwwww.....isn't that sweet? it warms people's hearts for some reason. even though the big dummies are, in fact, actors. shouldn't be that amazing.

scott seward, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:26 (nine years ago)

re: other films to compare it to, maybe A.I.? some thematic overlap, world-building, but just strikes me as a much richer movie. (i wonder if making the pregnant girl in CoM less of a macguffin and more of a fleshed out character would solve most of my issues)

ryan, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:28 (nine years ago)

Counterpoint: A.I. was horrible

¶ (DJP), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:28 (nine years ago)

horribly great

ryan, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:29 (nine years ago)

i'm actually writing a screenplay now about a bucktoothed woman with a mullet down south who is obsessed with jean harlow. the woman and the ghost of jean harlow are played by the same actress. Charlize Theron is...Daisy May Harlow. $$$ in the bank!

scott seward, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:31 (nine years ago)

why didn't i go to film school? any idiot can do it. i ain't got no connections though....

scott seward, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:32 (nine years ago)

The only part of A.I. I didn't loathe was the bit where Haleybot malfunctioned and briefly turned his face into the gaping maw of hell.

¶ (DJP), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:35 (nine years ago)

i remember watching this movie and thinking the first 25 minutes or so laid some interesting foundations for this hypothetical world

then i was like

http://images-cdn.9gag.com/photo/aPG9p2n_700b.jpg

F♯ A♯ (∞), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:39 (nine years ago)

i can't figure out which is worse: A.I. or Bicentennial Man. it's a toss-up.

scott seward, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:40 (nine years ago)

i just thought children of men was a cool action movie. it was scary! so much tension. but i never thought about it much after i saw it. i would watch it again though. cooler than most dystopian whatever movies.

scott seward, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:43 (nine years ago)

The best thing about AI was the immersive computer game that the studio had built/released as a promotion, that had hundreds of thousands of ppl from all around the world cracking tiny bits of code and tracing tiny clues in multiple languages. And, like, calling the phone number in the code and speaking to actors hired to give certain messages and more clues and stuff. It was glorious.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Beast_(game)

If authoritarianism is Romania's ironing board, then (in orbit), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 17:47 (nine years ago)

i've been a contrarian about this film since it was released, but i just watched it again because of this thread. i am still mostly unmoved by it (has anyone read the book? id be curious how they compare) but the one thing that's undeniable is those long tracking shots and the incredible tension they generate.

I also watched this again after reading that article / not being particularly moved when I first saw it, didn't really change my opinion. cool worldbuilding and cinematography, shame they wasted it on a movie w/o much of a plot. kinda felt like some really well-made post-apocalyptic video game, tons of attention to detail but ultimately you're just wandering around a maze protecting the princess from bad guys.

iatee, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 18:54 (nine years ago)

A.I. was splendid, of course. (easy question: who has made multiple great films, Spielberg or Cuaron?)

I assume CoM will stand as the last good Michael Caine performance.

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 21:46 (nine years ago)

this was a good movie that I don't really feel the need to ever watch again. It is very much structured like a video game, and while the attention to detail and the relentless forward motion made for compelling viewing, I'm having a hard time thinking there's anything meaningful that I would gain from repeating the fairly traumatic experience of watching it.

my wife was 8 months pregnant when we saw this in the theater lol

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 21:55 (nine years ago)

xp: It should be mentioned that Children of Men was very against type for P. D. James. Brit mainstream authors seem to do rather well when they dip their toes in spec fic. cf. Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go (a better novel than CoM, a poorer movie).

Least-satisfying overall (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:03 (nine years ago)

because the movie (despite the many great things about it all noted in this thread) seems so intellectually thin to me

i feel like maybe the problem was more like it had so many themes + ideas where it clearly tried to be doing something and failed to live up to itself? like a movie that tried to do less would seem more intellectual bc it wasn't trying so hard? i liked it a lot but i remember when i first watched it during the manger scene i was just like wtf is this bullshit. (but in other ways it does seem packed full of ideas, but maybe didn't figure out exactly what it wanted to do w/ them so it never really coheres?)

Mordy, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:10 (nine years ago)

mainstream authors seem to do rather well when they dip their toes in spec fic

I tend to absolutely revile this shit, hard-pressed for examples I've read that I didn't loathe

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:11 (nine years ago)

I have never thought of this movie as a movie of ideas. Just a document of the end and then a possible beginning.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:12 (nine years ago)

the road? xp

Mordy, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:14 (nine years ago)

idk if he's mainstream tho feel like a lot of his work before the road was along similar lines. wanted to say atwood but she's another one who's more like a spec fic author who has entered the mainstream than a mainstream writer trying spec fic?

Mordy, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:15 (nine years ago)

Brit mainstream authors seem to do rather well when they dip their toes in spec fic.

If by "do rather well" you mean "rack up fawning reviews and award nominations from critics who sneer at actual good SF," then yes, they absolutely do.

Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:15 (nine years ago)

yeah I didn't read The Road. Burnt out on McCarthy's schtick years prior.

xp

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:15 (nine years ago)

don't get me started about Margaret Atwood

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:16 (nine years ago)

McCarthy's last book that was worth a shit was Blood Meridian. He's been coasting ever since.

Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:16 (nine years ago)

Blood Meridian definitely the platonic ideal of the Cormac McCarthy novel. there was basically no point to his style after that.

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:17 (nine years ago)

lol u two i mean it's not a totally intolerable opinion but gmafb

Mordy, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:18 (nine years ago)

All the Pretty Horses could have been published by Harlequin.

Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:19 (nine years ago)

It should remembered that because the film came out in 2006, ie fairly early in the Perpetual War on Terrah, it had a certain topicality which might now have shifted into ah-fuck-it-reality-is-so-much-worse.

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:22 (nine years ago)

fwiw Atwood's not a "spec fic author who has entered the mainstream" she was never a part of that genre/community (of her own volition, by all appearances)

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:24 (nine years ago)

This thread made me line up Children of Men to see tonight, but the mere mention of A.I. nary put me off completely. DJP otm, A.I. is horrible. Single most disappointing movie I ever saw at a theatre. I was in complete disbelief at how Spielberg managed to fuck Kubricks work up so badly. Finish it somehow completely out of touch with Kubrick's idea of the film. It should have ended 30 mins earlier, frozen at the bottom of flooded NYC imho.

Still going to watch Children of Men now though, for the first time!

Le Bateau Ivre, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:30 (nine years ago)

> you mean "rack up fawning reviews and award nominations from critics who sneer at actual good SF," then yes

Fine. SF authors are inspired by ideas, more mainstream ones by character, so for someone like me who reads a handful of fiction novels a year, I rather enjoy the latter ones slumming in spec fiction.

I'm still waiting for better authors than Bacigalupi/Vaye Watkins or gods forbid K. S. Robinson etc to stumble into the Cli-Fi space. One can only recommend Marcel Theroux & Emily St. John Mandel so many times.

Least-satisfying overall (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:32 (nine years ago)

for the 43rd time, the plot ofr A.I. as it was filmed is EXACTLY WHAT KUBRICK HANDED OFF TO SPIELBERG. (also, S.S. inherited the film BEFORE S.K.'s death.)

XP

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:34 (nine years ago)

Cli-Fi space

Ballard's not good enough for you, eh? Brunner's "Sheep Look Up", Aldiss' "Hothouse"... there's a lot of these books

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:45 (nine years ago)

David Mitchell goes there too in his recent books (although not v successfully imo)

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:46 (nine years ago)

(the Hawai'i sequence in Cloud Atlas being the exception)

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:47 (nine years ago)

this is maybe for a different thread

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:47 (nine years ago)

xpost I love AI, but it is a very different film from CoM. Also, I can totally see the quirks of AI rubbing people the wrong way, but CoM is pretty action-movie sure-footed.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:50 (nine years ago)

did Kubrick always adhere to the exact plot/shooting script of films and not do editing

mh 😏, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:54 (nine years ago)

for the 43rd time, the plot ofr A.I. as it was filmed is EXACTLY WHAT KUBRICK HANDED OFF TO SPIELBERG.

Eyes Wide Shut sucked too, I'm not laying the entirety of this turd at Spielberg's door.

¶ (DJP), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:57 (nine years ago)

Tangent: all of the James Bond movies are "like a video game;" yet Albert Broccoli never owned a PlayStation 4. Discuss.

The beaver is not the bad guy (El Tomboto), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:57 (nine years ago)

all of the James Bond movies are "like a video game terrible

fixed

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:58 (nine years ago)

Of course he did, even after release. BUT after developing the scenario for YEARS, what you see on the screen is what he and one Ian Watson came up with. SK eventually decided to executive-produce with Spielberg directing, a few months before his death.

xxxp

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 22:59 (nine years ago)

Eyes Wide Shut is one of the best films about marriage, but it didn't have a Death Star gittin' blowed up, I'll give ya that

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 23:01 (nine years ago)

Eyes Wide Shut was a phenomenally stupid movie about marriage and relationships in general, in that the idea that distant, repellent people have problems connecting with each other isn't really something you need a boring orgy scene to figure out.

¶ (DJP), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 23:03 (nine years ago)

A.I. was non-terrible
007 is terrible
Cuaron invented video games
The Death Star was cut from Eyes Wide Shut

I learned so much today!

The beaver is not the bad guy (El Tomboto), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 23:05 (nine years ago)

no no DJP you're thinking of Knocked Up

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 23:08 (nine years ago)


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