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

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i did not see bubble. i should, but i'm kinda scared to. lemme know if it's worth it.

Jams Murphy (ystrickler), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:42 (seventeen years ago) link

Does Anthony like Haneke's Cache / Hidden?

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:42 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, please provide examples of movies that aren't obvious and transparent, because I suspect that any one of us could take your example and apply the same "OMG that's so Hollywood stylee" critique.

Fleischhutliebe! like a warm, furry meatloaf (Fluffy Bear Hearts Rainbows), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:42 (seventeen years ago) link

OH PLEEZ NOT AGAIN.

(xpost)

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:43 (seventeen years ago) link

The one part that felt Hollywood-y to me is during that long shot in the city, where the terrorist dudes have Clive kneeling with a gun to his head. Extra dude gets shot, and of course Clive isn't going to die right then but you know a deus ex machina is coming (was it a tank shell? I can't remember). It was still exciting though.

xpost

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:43 (seventeen years ago) link

if im chronically misreading you plz explain how? do you think this film is being dishonest or not? and if so do you think this dishonesty is somehow unecessary?

and what (ooo), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:43 (seventeen years ago) link

To handle conventions effectively is in large part a sleight of hand; you're really concealing them.

At this point, what storyteller does that not pertain to. Because I'm trying to discern how dude is using it as a point of differentiation.

Fleischhutliebe! like a warm, furry meatloaf (Fluffy Bear Hearts Rainbows), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:44 (seventeen years ago) link

I thought Bubble kind of...hmmm. It was okay enough while I was watching it but vaguely meandering (and not in a good way) and ended up seeming extremely immemorable to me. I remember the final scenes being freaky but the rest of the movie just seemed to lack SOMETHING.

AllyzayEisenschefterBDawkinsFlyingSquirrelRomoCrying.jpg (allyzay), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:45 (seventeen years ago) link

Ethan, basically concealment has a lot more to do with the effort made to keep your logic at bay, where handling the conventions effectively is more about grabbing you emotionally. There's lots of movie that people admit are stupid but still cried at, these are movies that effectively handled the conventions but didn't do much of a job concealing. Get it?

Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:46 (seventeen years ago) link

yeah seriously i think whats mostly tripping me out here is that i always thought anthony was into, you know, well-crafted hollywood flicks, not hyperrealist cinema verite

and what (ooo), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:48 (seventeen years ago) link

xpost, sorry i still have no idea what youre talking about - so which of those things did this movie do?

and what (ooo), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:48 (seventeen years ago) link

My eyeballs hurt. Time for a amoke.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:50 (seventeen years ago) link

Anthony, you're getting challenged here because, to an apparently large number of us, you don't actually appear to be making any sense.

The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:52 (seventeen years ago) link

Ok Anthony my answer is this. When you talk about "picking off characters one by one" as a film formula, I think of horror films and movies like Predator, where the point of the picking-off is to establish that the villain is Very Very Dangerous, to ramp up the sense of risk and the idea that something is at stake, and more or less to make it seem cooler when the protagonist finally faces and defeats the villain.

That dynamic has very little to do with this film. Julian's death isn't a picking-off thing: it's a basic plot activator, because so long as she is alive, she's the person who's planning and commanding the whole activity; her death is like the murder of authority after which all descends into chaos, which strikes me as both a fine narrative activator and well in keeping with the whole system of the film. Jasper and Miriam's exits are calculated to produce a whole different effect than the "Villain Grows Closer" formula, one that's less about danger than about sacrifice in the service of, umm, a child -- that strikes me as normal narrative and thematic building more than the application of "formula." (And actually the hint of "we're in real shit now" upon Miriam's exit was fairly effective for me.) Theo's death in the end doesn't fit any "picking the characters off one by one" film formula I'm aware of -- it'd be more obviously in the "hero expires with satisfaction of having achieved objective" camp -- and in combination with the Russians getting shot, it seems to underscore something very different from the picked-off arrangement.

My real bone here, though, is that something like the "hero expires with satisfaction of having achieved objective" trope is not just automatically a formula and therefore a bad thing. It's a building block of countless stories since the whole beginning of stories. It reads as a "formula" when it doesn't belong, when it's unearned, where it's trying to remind you of the idea of "hero expires etc." rather than establishing that itself. (Cf using that string theme from "Romeo & Juliet" to shorthand "and now they're falling in love.") This doesn't mean that "hero expires" or "they fall in love" can't be legitimate and well-handled parts of a functioning narrative. Some of what you're saying here sounds to me a little like saying "that's so lame how this story conceals the conventional fact that they fall in love" -- to me, when well-handled, that's not "concealing," it's just using a basic narrative building block in a way that escapes the formulaic way it's usually, done. Which is a good thing.

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:54 (seventeen years ago) link

I always cry at Independence day when Pullman tells his daughter that her mom's dead.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:54 (seventeen years ago) link

isnt the blood on the lens shot a bit of "hey look at how long this shot is"--i cant imagine what other purpose it serves beyond a sort "you are THERE" kinda thing.

ryan (ryan), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:55 (seventeen years ago) link

The blod/lens thing didn';t make me go "this is the same shot" so much as "fuck that's gross".

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:56 (seventeen years ago) link

I always cry at "Independence Day" because Vivica A Fox is like the only film stripper who only goes down to a bikini.

The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:56 (seventeen years ago) link

I find most of the complaints about the film baffling I just wanted to speak up for a moment and point out that NOT everybody who helps Kee dies.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:57 (seventeen years ago) link

xpost

Another way of putting this: when Caine goes down doing the "pull my finger" routine from the opening, that fits a well-known story convention -- character goes out defiantly doing the same stuff that made us like him. But there's a reason people like that convention, and depending on how a film treats it, it can read as either succumbing to lame formula or just effectively pushing the emotional button that gets pushed when we see this sort of thing happen.

xpost -- Shakey, are you keeping the air strikes in account?

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:57 (seventeen years ago) link

Ethan, this is a movie that took a lot of effort to make its emotional grabs and storyline seem less standard than they really were, something that's impressive enough but I can think of things a director can do that I find more impressive. So to repeat myself for the last time, the movie was good but it didn't live up to the expectations I got from critics. Expectations that may have been unwarranted. In which case, I apologize to the offended.

And now...your moment of zen.

http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y113/im52xmax/skowie8F07-047.jpg

x-post Nabisco you make a pretty decent point, though I think you're so determined to protect the basic tenets of narrative (which I am not challenging) that you're not acknowledge the presence of cliche at all (just as I'm undoubtedly overstating it on the relative scale of cinema today).

Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 18 January 2007 21:58 (seventeen years ago) link

i think the ultimate problem with the film isn't its conventionality (i love that shit usually) or anything like that. it's just a deeply unsatisfying film that, beyond a few thrills (like exactly 3 maybe), was sort of morose without any intelligence and lacking really anything to get worked up about. if it's an action movie it's a bad, boring one beyond a few scenes, and if it's a thoughtful sci-fi dsytopia it's kinda cool but really nothing special beyond a few rotting cow carcasses.


i guess i just dont get the fuss :/

ryan (ryan), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:00 (seventeen years ago) link

And when you say "is this cliche really so bad?" my answer is "relatively speaking, no, I'm just talking about my expectations."

x-post to Nabs.

Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:02 (seventeen years ago) link

I don't think anything about this movie attempted to make the storyline seem less standard than it actually was! I just think it was really fucking good and harrowing.

Ryan, what do you mean when you say the movie "was sort of morose without any intelligence and lacking really anything to get worked up about"? Did you perhaps see "The Cleaner" by mistake???

The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:03 (seventeen years ago) link

Anthony I'm not trying to deny cliche, just trying to ferret out where it bugged you in this film -- but yr kinda getting piled on, so don't worry about spelling it out or anything. You're definitely right about the "relative scale of cinema" part -- I mean, 90% of films are made of nothing but rearrangements of conventions, and we're all content to enjoy and talk about superhero movies or romantic comedies without saying "I thought it was kinda obvious how that thing his uncle told him helped him win the final battle" or "I thought the part where they met cute was a little formulaic" or whatever. (That former's a good example, actually: I think my difference between "cliche" and "narrative convention" is the difference between when the hero thinks back on what his uncle said and you groan, and when the hero thinks back on what his uncle said and you just understand the connection at face value.)

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:04 (seventeen years ago) link

haha, maybe! i dunno i just got a "omg NY was nuked, no more babies, isnt that terrible!" --- it doesn't go beyond the cliches in that department really. i mean, children's voices at the end? it's just cloying...

ryan (ryan), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:06 (seventeen years ago) link

"xpost -- Shakey, are you keeping the air strikes in account?"

hmm you have a good point there but assuming characters get killed isn't the same as showing them being picked off - in terms of supporting-cast-whose-deaths-you-don't-see I was thinking of the rich dude and the gypsy. Marika (sp?) may have been my favorite character.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:07 (seventeen years ago) link

What's a cliche but a truism that's become horribly apparent?

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:08 (seventeen years ago) link

rofl at "The Cleaner."

I think Ryan is getting at part of the problem I have with these types of movies, which is that the second you start taking on some political pretensions (which it'd be really facetious to claim this movie didn't), I start holding it to a higher standard than I do, say, Crank.

Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:09 (seventeen years ago) link

Anthony this is why I have stopped reading reviews entirely until after I've seen the movie. With music it's different, somebody can talk about an album for a whole page and I still don't really have "it". Movies on the other hand are so much about narrative and, like nabisco says, the rearranging of tried n true filmic furniture, that even if no actual spoilers are given it's impossible not to erect a model of what you think it's going to be like in your mind, and if you're kind of excited about it, it is very very hard - in my experience - for it to live up to what you've been imagining. Which is why I really lucked out with this one, the only reason I went is because I'd locked myself out and my roommates had just gone to the Ritzy to watch it.

Ryan I think somebody else linked to an interview where they said the blood on the lens thing just happened by accident and they decided to carry on with it.

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Reading reviews beforehand doesn't really affect whether I liked the movie or not, but it obviously does alter what I feel the desire to point out about the film to people after the fact.

Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:11 (seventeen years ago) link

Re: political messages, for me the great strength of this movie is that it SHOWS rather than TELLS, even when they're re-creating scenes from Abu Ghraib, it's just put there in front of you. The world they've set up has nothing to do with Iraq, so there's no one-to-one-correspondence being claimed for anything.

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:13 (seventeen years ago) link

It could be argued that actually re-creating images of Abu Gharib is just as much a "TELL" as a character saying "Abu Gharib, yo."

Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:15 (seventeen years ago) link

Though I was more annoyed by the TELL involving Pink Floyd.

Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:15 (seventeen years ago) link

Pink Floyd make everything m ore annoying.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:16 (seventeen years ago) link

It could be argued that actually re-creating images of Abu Gharib is just as much a "TELL" as a character saying "Abu Gharib, yo."

Yeah, by someone WHO IS BATSHIT CRAZY.

The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:16 (seventeen years ago) link

i liked the newspaper that went something like "Russia detonates Nuclear Bomb. Kazakstan annihilated!"

ryan (ryan), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:18 (seventeen years ago) link

Dystopian science fiction is inherently political, no? Come on, dude.

elmo argonaut (allocryptic), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:19 (seventeen years ago) link

Theo's "London 2012" sweatshirt was a nice touch.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:19 (seventeen years ago) link

The political message seems to bve look at how good people are at doing terrible things to eachother even in the face of salvation.

Fleischhutliebe! like a warm, furry meatloaf (Fluffy Bear Hearts Rainbows), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:19 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, this is barely a sci-fi film, right?

Fleischhutliebe! like a warm, furry meatloaf (Fluffy Bear Hearts Rainbows), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:21 (seventeen years ago) link

But... it's in the future.

The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:21 (seventeen years ago) link

what about star wars?

Steve Shasta (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:23 (seventeen years ago) link

Romantic comedy.

The Android Cat (Dan Perry), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:24 (seventeen years ago) link

I love scifi films that take place mainly in the countryside, there aren't many.

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:24 (seventeen years ago) link

Maybe it's a war movie. It has battles and guns like Black Hawk Down.

Fleischhutliebe! like a warm, furry meatloaf (Fluffy Bear Hearts Rainbows), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:26 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, this is barely a sci-fi film, right?

Sure it is! Speculative fiction, anyway. It's much more sci-fi then, say, Alien, which is just a horror movie in space.

Charlie Brown (kenan), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:27 (seventeen years ago) link

waht?

dune and star wars and logan's run are all totally pastoral you senile doosh

TOMB07 (TOMBOT), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:27 (seventeen years ago) link

also deep space completely counts as the countryside wtf

TOMB07 (TOMBOT), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:28 (seventeen years ago) link

"Sleeper" takes place almost entirely in the countryside.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 18 January 2007 22:29 (seventeen years ago) link


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