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

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But ryan, you kind of hate everything.

HI DERE, Monday, 23 April 2007 20:27 (seventeen years ago) link

Did anybody else walk away from that movie all teary-eyed with hope and love for people?

Because I was all about hugs for about the next 24 hours.


I'm taking the risk that you're not being sarcastic, but yes to your question!

Lostandfound, Monday, 23 April 2007 21:02 (seventeen years ago) link

HI DERE FAN clunkiness = camp = COM

Kiwi, Monday, 23 April 2007 23:13 (seventeen years ago) link

wtf camp?

That one guy that quit, Monday, 23 April 2007 23:17 (seventeen years ago) link

DOES NOT COMPUTE

max, Monday, 23 April 2007 23:19 (seventeen years ago) link

refugee camp?

kingfish, Monday, 23 April 2007 23:22 (seventeen years ago) link

ha wrong word? anyway I meant so awful its good kind of way, I assumed the clunkiness was intentional.

Kiwi, Monday, 23 April 2007 23:33 (seventeen years ago) link

finally saw this last night. very arresting, superbly shot blah blah, i thoroughly 'enjoyed' it. at the end i felt a mixture of relief but also wanted more - glad it wasn't 'overlong' tho.

blueski, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:36 (seventeen years ago) link

A lot of people were very affected by this film, but looking back I didn't really care about the main character or Kee very much at all. The main dude just seemed grim and determined, completely emotionless and Kee had little emotional quality either.

the next grozart, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:38 (seventeen years ago) link

We just caught part of a movie on TV with Clive Owen playing King Arthur! And Keira Knightly as Guinevere. She's fine until she opens her mouth, and then the posh accent (or what sounds to my American ears as one, who knows, maybe it's totally KK's invention), totally blows the effect.

Beth Parker, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:44 (seventeen years ago) link

Keira Knightly has a posh accent to British ears too.

chap, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:47 (seventeen years ago) link

The main dude just seemed grim and determined, completely emotionless

apart from the bit where he's crouched by the tree breaking down over the sudden death of J Moore's character, and the quiet rage that nearly overwhelms him when Caine's character is shot...plus quite a few other scenes! he seemed cold and cynical initially because of what had happened to his son as well as the world in general.

blueski, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:49 (seventeen years ago) link

Yes, but don't you think a British Queen would have a posh accent? Surely that is natural?

x-post

Masonic Boom, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:50 (seventeen years ago) link

i didn't give a shit about his son. i know i was supposed to, but i couldn't.

the next grozart, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:51 (seventeen years ago) link

have you seen king arthur? that isn't the effect they are going for with her character at all, beth is right that her accent is inappropriate.

the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:52 (seventeen years ago) link

it would have been awesome if she was speaking in totally authentic old celtic but nobody else was, but everyone could still understand her, like chewbacca

gff, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:56 (seventeen years ago) link

I have seen the film. It made complete and total liberties with both Arthurian myth and British history so Guinivere's accent was the least of my concerns.

Masonic Boom, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:58 (seventeen years ago) link

"It made complete and total liberties with both Arthurian myth and British history"

what does this even mean?

the arthurian myth is... a myth. it's okay to take liberties with a myth because a) everyone else does b) myth takes total liberties with british history. and it's a film about the myth, so yes obviously it takes liberties with british history!

That one guy that quit, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:24 (seventeen years ago) link

OK, in what universe, mythical or historical, did the Saxons invade England from the *NORTH*? Historically, they invaded from the South of England. In every single example of the Arthurian cycle, the Saxons invaded from the South.

In this film, they invade from the North.

That's what I mean by taking liberties with both myth and history. It's one thing to add another layer or interpretation on an existing folk tradition, but quite another to just completely make something up.

Just because something is mythical does not mean that there are not certain common threads which can be held to be crucial to the story.

Masonic Boom, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:31 (seventeen years ago) link

two months pass...

Good discussions above. I saw this in the theater back in January, and just rented it last weekend and watched it twice more. I really love this film, Cuaron is a fantastic director -- Y tu mama tambien was great too.

Would anyone recommend the Harry Potter movie Cuaron directed? I've neither read any of the books nor seen the other movies, but I was thinking about renting this one just for Cuaron's directing.

Also, here's one of the many, many fantastic reviews to be found on IMDB message boards, this one on Children of Men:

"Unimaginative rubbish. It's dull, and it's pointless. The soundtrack seems like it was made by Merzbow."

Mark Clemente, Tuesday, 26 June 2007 14:02 (sixteen years ago) link

mmm fantastic

blueski, Tuesday, 26 June 2007 14:10 (sixteen years ago) link

Mark - Cuaron's Potter flick is by far the cream of that crop, & def. worth a see. & not knowing much about HP shouldn't be a hindrance.

David R., Tuesday, 26 June 2007 14:20 (sixteen years ago) link

two months pass...

I finally saw this on DVD last night and wow. I live pretty near Bexhill, it just felt so real, like this could really happen.

What it made me think of was something I read in an essay by Richard Rorty, where he described the greatest fear of one of the original American pragmatists, James or Dewey maybe. It was something along the lines that the greatest fear, if you take God out of the equation, is of the human race ending. That there will be no one to pass knowledge onto, that it all will have been pointless. He uses this image of the human race as existing on an iced-over pond, that we think we are so safe but at any moment it may break and we all may drown. The phrase I think I remember being used was "fellow sufferers", that's what Children of Men was about for me, the hope that though there'll be suffering it may in the end all be worth it.

The comments on those Rotten Tomatoes pages linked up thread are so depressing, many arguing it is little more than leftist propoganda.

I was suprised to noticed that the DVD includes "Comments by Slavoj Žižek", has anyone wathed these? Isn't Žižek anti-humanist or something, I only have a cursory knowledge of his stuff, because for all it's grimness COM was in the end I thought very humanist.

Also for in an odd way it was sort of like a superhardcore Dr Who episode.

acrobat, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 10:16 (sixteen years ago) link

Also "The Last Dance" by Disco Inferno. That song as a film.

acrobat, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 10:43 (sixteen years ago) link

thr zizek bit is interesting, i reviewed it. basically it takes little bits of footage from the film that resonate with real-world post-9/11 stuff, like the pens for refugees and the guantanamo stuff, and the armed guards at the railway stations, only abstracted from the film and without the main characters. they could even be off-cuts.

and over this zizek discusses the ‘paradox of anamorphosis’ and argues that ‘the true focus of the film is there in the background’.

he also appears in another doc on the dvd which is about the necessity of utopian thinking. i don't know if he's a humanist. probably he'd say "is it not precisely in the negation of humanism that we are at our most truly humanist?"... while being sucked off by a cult. studs masters student.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 08:44 (sixteen years ago) link

is your review online?

acrobat, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 08:52 (sixteen years ago) link

ah so! srank you velly much!!

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 14:44 (sixteen years ago) link

this movie lost money

Tracer Hand, Monday, 3 September 2007 10:43 (sixteen years ago) link

Domestic: $35,327,768 51.0%
+ Foreign: $33,889,234 49.0%
= Worldwide: $69,217,002

Production Budget: $76 million

Tracer Hand, Monday, 3 September 2007 10:44 (sixteen years ago) link

surely it'll make a fair bit on dvd?

acrobat, Monday, 3 September 2007 10:49 (sixteen years ago) link

i just bought the dvd so that should help

lol xpost

emsk, Monday, 3 September 2007 10:49 (sixteen years ago) link

"probably he'd say "is it not precisely in the negation of humanism that we are at our most truly humanist?"... while being sucked off by a cult. studs masters student."

Ha ha that's brilliant nrq. OTOH he lambasts that very sort of pseudo-deep inversionism all the time. Not that that disproves your point whatsoever.

Tim F, Monday, 3 September 2007 12:37 (sixteen years ago) link

this movie lost money

don't all films lose money? I have heard that this is a key feature in how they are funded.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Monday, 3 September 2007 13:29 (sixteen years ago) link

no some movies are hits

da croupier, Monday, 3 September 2007 13:45 (sixteen years ago) link

the hits pay for the large proportion of movies that lose money.

also lawyers get very, very rich arguing the toss over hollywood's accounting practices.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Tuesday, 4 September 2007 08:50 (sixteen years ago) link

Watched it again. Well saw bits of it. Watched the extras with Naomi Klein, Zizek et al prophesising the worst. Would have liked someone with a slightly different outlook to have been interviewed, maybe. Zizek due was kinda right about the film happening in the background but kind of wrong as well. Theo's arc is important y know. It's also IMO about the importance of Solidarity (Rorty again). The opening oddly reminds me of the opeing of Shaun of the Dead, sleepwalking through London as the world falls apart, probably in more films but y know limited frame of reference. Is the bomb meant to go off on Cheapside? Walked past there today then saw some Asian guy being stopped by the police and then all the newspaper front pages with Maddie starring out... and Let's Shake Our Heads About Political Discourse In Switzerland Hell in a handcart, man.

acrobat, Monday, 10 September 2007 10:43 (sixteen years ago) link

i thought it was fleet street?

i know, zizek is basically overstating it. i was reading some stuff from the early '60s about how wisdescreen and depth-of-focus had made 'bringing the background into the foreground' a thing then, though the examples he was using escape me.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 10 September 2007 10:46 (sixteen years ago) link

Did you read the piece by erk Johann Hari on Zizek in The New Statesman?

acrobat, Monday, 10 September 2007 10:48 (sixteen years ago) link

i think so. a few months ago?

hari doesn't know what he's talking about really, about anything. the fact he's been employed by the british press as an authority on anything is amazing. what'ss even worse is the americans employ him too.

this is the only hari piece worth reading:

http://www.johannhari.com/archive/article.php?id=831

fuck that guy.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 10 September 2007 10:55 (sixteen years ago) link

That Johann Hari guy bugs the shit out of me for reasons I can't quite put my finger on. He's been on loads of things over the last few months, from Big Brother On The Couch to Newsnight Review, and I have to turn over as soon as his big fat baby face appears. Maybe those articles above will pinpoint my irritation better than I can.

nate woolls, Monday, 10 September 2007 11:11 (sixteen years ago) link

these are main reasons for me

- ignorance. of facts, of history, of ideas, of culture, leading to
- simplification. his mode of arguing hasn't changed since his pro-war stuff in 2002-03. "would YOU like to be governed by saddam? no? well then!"
- has lied. see recent 'private eye'.
- jeffrey archer connection.
- am simply mystified as to his position. why is he so widely employed? what are his editors thinking? leading to
- he is my age

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 10 September 2007 11:34 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah I think it's those last two points of yours, mainly. Plus he's probably younger than me by about 10 years.

nate woolls, Monday, 10 September 2007 11:41 (sixteen years ago) link

A mate of mine. Lovely bloke.

Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 10 September 2007 12:31 (sixteen years ago) link

glad to hear it.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 10 September 2007 12:35 (sixteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

This was probably a bad example to illuminate Hollywood's abortion taboo, though I do think such a taboo exists. Seriously, how many Hollywood films can you name where someone gets pregnant but has an abortion? Or films where someone has an abortion, but afterwards gets on her with her life and doesn't become totally traumatized by it?

(xx-post)

-- Tuomas, Monday, 24 September 2007 10:43 (Yesterday) Link

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Tuesday, 25 September 2007 07:16 (sixteen years ago) link

The film thread that refuses to die.

Haven't time right now, but there needs to be a Shoot'em Up discussion here. The Clive Owen eye roll at the start is so "Oh no not again", that it is all about CoM.

Pete, Tuesday, 25 September 2007 12:09 (sixteen years ago) link

Come anticipate Shoot 'Em Up with me

t -6 hrs

, Tuesday, 25 September 2007 12:12 (sixteen years ago) link

four months pass...

boyfriend has this on in the next room

i'm too tipsy to read any of the stuff in this thread

he tells me it has julianne mmoore in it

is it good?

keep it short.

Surmounter, Thursday, 31 January 2008 03:08 (sixteen years ago) link


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