― kyle (akmonday), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 04:21 (seventeen years ago) link
― milo z (mlp), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 04:25 (seventeen years ago) link
― Forksclovetofu (Forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 04:29 (seventeen years ago) link
when they were smoking w33d the first time and telling jokes about scientists munching stork.
― jambalaya backgammon (grady), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 04:34 (seventeen years ago) link
― cutty (mcutt), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 05:03 (seventeen years ago) link
― milo z (mlp), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 05:04 (seventeen years ago) link
― Tape Store (Tape Store), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 05:13 (seventeen years ago) link
― dmr (Renard), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 06:18 (seventeen years ago) link
― Michael J McGonigal (mike mcgonigal), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 06:38 (seventeen years ago) link
― Michael J McGonigal (mike mcgonigal), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 06:41 (seventeen years ago) link
but yeah, an amazing, film. "emotionally draining" is otfm.
― mikebee (heywood), Wednesday, 10 January 2007 21:03 (seventeen years ago) link
A big thing this movie accomplished for me, and what I think it accomplishes for probably just about everyone who sees it, is the feeling of what War is Really Like. Never knowing peace, always being on the move, life being very very cheap, having crowds and movements and passionately violent people always around the next corner saying some stuff you agree with, a lot of stuff you don't, and you not really knowing how to handle it, not feeling equipped to deal. It's what people in Iraq live with every day but I can't think of an article or television report which has made me feel it the way that this movie did.
― Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 11 January 2007 00:05 (seventeen years ago) link
― jed_ (jed), Thursday, 11 January 2007 00:08 (seventeen years ago) link
― jambalaya backgammon (grady), Thursday, 11 January 2007 00:24 (seventeen years ago) link
Today it came to me. In the New Testament, Romans 15:10, I believe (might be 10:15 - it's been a long time since Bible college), says, in part, "How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel of peace."
It just seems appropo, somehow.
― Hey Jude (Hey Jude), Thursday, 11 January 2007 00:30 (seventeen years ago) link
He washes Theo's feet and dies for him the next day. There are probably more (maybe not).
― Tape Store (Tape Store), Thursday, 11 January 2007 01:09 (seventeen years ago) link
― Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 11 January 2007 01:16 (seventeen years ago) link
― Tape Store (Tape Store), Thursday, 11 January 2007 01:18 (seventeen years ago) link
― jed_ (jed), Thursday, 11 January 2007 01:22 (seventeen years ago) link
There's a line about them being a collective of scientists working on the infertility problem, right? I thought that was enough. Obviously they're the ones to get this miracle woman to, for study.
I didn't have a clear answer when my friend asked me afterwards why they didn't let the government know. Just because she's an immigrant? Surely the government would value a baby more than they would hate an immigrant, right? Since the hatred of immigrants stemmed from a loss of hope, at least indirectly, and this baby would be hope, and Britain would have something suddenly that no other country did. Right? That's a great deal of hand to have.
I dunno. Apparently not.
― there to preserve disorder (kenan), Thursday, 11 January 2007 06:24 (seventeen years ago) link
― there to preserve disorder (kenan), Thursday, 11 January 2007 06:26 (seventeen years ago) link
― there to preserve disorder (kenan), Thursday, 11 January 2007 06:30 (seventeen years ago) link
― there to preserve disorder (kenan), Thursday, 11 January 2007 06:31 (seventeen years ago) link
― max (maxreax), Thursday, 11 January 2007 07:10 (seventeen years ago) link
A lot of the "but this wasn't explained" questions seem a little weird to me, especially when it comes to the stuff that totally was explained: e.g., going to the government is precisely what Owen is suggesting in the kitten-claws bit! To which everyone responds that they'll take away the baby and deport Ki, which she and Miriam are against for obvious moral/personal reasons, and the Fish are pushing because of their own baby-having agenda.
When this ended and the title flashed back up, someone behind me snorted derisively, and then, when the title gave way to credits, two other people snorted exactly the same way. I'm a tad mystified by this: it's laid out pretty clearly that the scope of the thing is "we must get her to the boat," so ... what, were they hoping for an extra fifteen minutes of montage where it's all like "hooray, we have sorted out the baby problem, and everything is going back to normal now?"
― nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 11 January 2007 08:22 (seventeen years ago) link
P.P.S.: As far as Christian overtones go, I feel like this was fairly light on them, considering how much the scenario jumps up and down screaming "hello I am totally wide open for as much Christian-overtone pushing as you could possibly want to do" (and considering the director was born / raised / educated in Mexico, where surely Virgin Mary-tales are going to loom large in your experience and imagination no matter where you wind up in terms of religion).
― nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 11 January 2007 08:29 (seventeen years ago) link
I didn't have a clear answer when my friend asked me afterwards why they didn't let the government know. Just because she's an immigrant?
Yeah, I think it was pretty clear that both baby and mother would get the E.T. treatment.
Another one of the million things I liked about this film was the idea that, like in Day of the Triffids, there was the feeling that this was just one of many stories, and that there were other people also trying to get pregnant women, or possibly pregnant women, to the Human Project.
There's also a little mean bit of me that likes to think that the Human Project is just as bad and will also give them the E.T. treatment. Because I like bleak films.
― accentmonkey (accentmonkey), Thursday, 11 January 2007 10:11 (seventeen years ago) link
I missed that line of dialogue. Yeah, that makes perfect sense, then.
― there to preserve disorder (kenan), Thursday, 11 January 2007 16:14 (seventeen years ago) link
― there to preserve disorder (kenan), Thursday, 11 January 2007 16:34 (seventeen years ago) link
― Hey Jude (Hey Jude), Thursday, 11 January 2007 17:19 (seventeen years ago) link
― M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 January 2007 17:21 (seventeen years ago) link
*Okay, so I somehow missed the Julian/Theo dialogue on the bus about Dylan 1.0. This was a very well-played, heartbreaking moment, that was really integral to understanding a lot of what was to come (in particular, why she came to him in the first place).
*The musical score, I realized this time, was very integrated - all the incidental music was mixed as to actually seem part of the events of the film, only once really did a piece of music stand out as not originating from someplace on-screen ("Court of the Crimson King", which they may have been listening to on Big Important Guy's car stereo). Every other piece of music came from SOMEWHERE - Jasper's home stereo, various car stereos, drums and other music panned hard right or left as though it was being performed on the street just off-screen. Really added to the immersiveness (is this even a real word?) of the film.
There's at least one more minutes long single-shot to the ambush and the Bexhill shot I hadn't caught on to the first time - that amazing barefoot jump-start escape from the Fishes' compound.
― baron kickass von awesomehausen (nickalicious), Thursday, 11 January 2007 17:24 (seventeen years ago) link
Well, granted, one of the many things the film leaves outside its scope is why, precisely, the government would be more committed to its deportation system than to fertility -- it's a little bit handwavy on that front. But even leaving aside deportation, it seems completely reasonable to assume they wouldn't just leave the first live birth in years to be raised by one of the refugees they've put so much energy into demonizing. And for Miriam, Ki, and Theo, at least, the idea of the government taking the baby and packing Ki off to a lab somewhere is just as problematic.
It also seems entirely possible that the Fish have just successfully scared everyone off putting any trust in the government, as their own agenda dictates, which seems like the kind of thing that might be laid out in more detail in novel form?
In any case, the amount of stuff that goes unexamined in this is definitely okay with me -- probably a good thing -- because we're kept so tightly in the immediate experience and concerns of the story. (In a case like this, there's not even much reason to think the characters can divine the government's motivations any more than we can.) And the story itself seems entirely coherent. The fact that there are things we don't entirely understand about the outside world -- things that seem like rumors and headlines that float momentarily by -- seems fairly appropriate to the setting, right?
― nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 11 January 2007 17:41 (seventeen years ago) link
― M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 January 2007 17:43 (seventeen years ago) link
I love the bit where the Fish deny involvement in the bombing from the beginning of the film, blaming the government, but as you learn more about them it becomes clear that it could have just as easily been them.
― max (maxreax), Thursday, 11 January 2007 17:44 (seventeen years ago) link
― nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 11 January 2007 17:46 (seventeen years ago) link
I was wondering if the initial infertility was caused by a genetically-engineered virus that targeted immigrants/third world that misfired and targeted everyone. Something similar to what took place in Frank Herbert's The White Plague.
― Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Thursday, 11 January 2007 18:07 (seventeen years ago) link
This was a bit obtrusive to me, too. It seemed very out of character for either the driver or Theo to play loud music on the drive.
― do i have to draw you a diaphragm (Rock Hardy), Thursday, 11 January 2007 18:20 (seventeen years ago) link
― cutty (mcutt), Thursday, 11 January 2007 18:26 (seventeen years ago) link
― S- (sgh), Friday, 12 January 2007 02:48 (seventeen years ago) link
I hope that the Final Cut of Blade Runner gets rid of the explanatory text at the beginning, the same way the Director's Cut got rid of the voiceover.
― there to preserve disorder (kenan), Friday, 12 January 2007 02:49 (seventeen years ago) link
the large amount of unexplained stuff is one of the movie's strongest points. thank GOD they didn't explain the infertility thing with some dumb gov't-weapons-project-gone-wrong thing.
― s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 12 January 2007 05:39 (seventeen years ago) link
― s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 12 January 2007 05:43 (seventeen years ago) link
will this depress me?
b/c the state of the world is pretty depressing latelyand i'm not even really a depressive person. i don't want all flowers and sunshine and lalala by any means, but i do want, er, hope, or something. (i love 'bladerunner,' i love 'aliens', if that matters in answering)
― rrrobyn, breeze blown meadow of cheeriness (rrrobyn), Friday, 12 January 2007 06:05 (seventeen years ago) link
― milo z (mlp), Friday, 12 January 2007 06:08 (seventeen years ago) link
― rrrobyn, breeze blown meadow of cheeriness (rrrobyn), Friday, 12 January 2007 06:14 (seventeen years ago) link
― s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 12 January 2007 06:24 (seventeen years ago) link
it's really really excellent.
― milo z (mlp), Friday, 12 January 2007 06:26 (seventeen years ago) link
― s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 12 January 2007 06:28 (seventeen years ago) link