What's a movie you've recently seen, new or old, that really blew you away? And how so? Always love some good recommendations! :D
@fan4every1lol895 ай бұрын
Everything Everywhere All At Once
@mikebasil48325 ай бұрын
For me the old would include 2001: A Space Odyssey, Blade Runner, Deliverance, The Sixth Sense and The Green Mile. The new would include Blade Runner 2049, I’m Thinking Of Ending Things, Get Out and two short Star Wars films: Premonition and Star Wars Origins. Thank you, Tom, for this most thought-provoking video on your channel. 👍🏻
@riffmondo97335 ай бұрын
Godzilla Minus One. It was the best of the franchise.
@chrisjoecken56045 ай бұрын
The Ascent and Portrait of Jason. The Ascent begins as a fairly traditional war film, but it develops into a profoundly moving spiritual allegory. Masterful direction and sound design. Portrait of Jason is probably one of the most psychologically complex character studies I've ever seen rendered on film. It's no surprise Ingmar Bergman rates it as highly as he does. Thank you for your work.
@cripplingclaustrophobia5 ай бұрын
Dune part 2 gave me goosebumps for hours
@mrink88225 ай бұрын
The funny thing about the first clip is that the good the bad and the ugly isn't even a pretentious film
@kevincgrabb5 ай бұрын
It would be like calling Raiders an art film, hahaha
@anthonybird5465 ай бұрын
We live in a day where Italian pulp schlock is thought of as highbrow. We are fucked.
@Raymando5 ай бұрын
@@anthonybird546 inb4 barbie is considered high brow pretentious cinema in 2050
@samuel.jpg.1080p5 ай бұрын
yeah, it's a major western film that when viewed from the time it was released, it wasn't an "indie pretentious film". It's more akin to a mainstream film back then
@morganqorishchi81815 ай бұрын
It's a non-Disney, non-superhero film and for a lot of people now, that means it IS pretentious and high brow and snobby and other dismissive terms meaning "you shouldn't watch it/have watched it".
@nope56575 ай бұрын
Passion for cinema is uncomplicated to me. I watch everything that interests me - be it mainstream, arthouse, old, new, considered "bad", considered "good." I don't look down on anything. I just bring my hope to enjoy what I'm about to watch.
@lkeke355 ай бұрын
This! This is how I watch everything. I just hope whatever it is I will enjoy it, that I'll be moved, and engaged. Lately I've been exploring Quiet Cinema (it's fascinating), while still enjoying the latest superhero and Horror movies!
@Ray035955 ай бұрын
Exactly. I watch anything that interest me. I watch good, bad, okay movies. Foreign language, animated... If it makes me curious I'll watch. I'm still guilty of Rotten Tomatoes letting me determine my viewing habits though because sometimes I want to watch a "truly" good film, but I've watched "truly" good films that are deemed "rotten". Surprised this video essay didnt bring up these aggregate sites and how movie studios specifically aim for high critic scores to shape audience perception.
@ramunebradfordtake27105 ай бұрын
Best way to view cinema and mainstream. This is an artistic medium. Say what you want about directors like Michael Bay there are technical talents that Bay has that others do not. Jane Champion has talents that Bay doesn't have. Glad that both are around.
@njdotson5 ай бұрын
The way I think about it is that a bunch of artists worked hard on every movie even if it's not that good. Movies are more interesting when I think about the decisions made to produce the film
@J5L5M65 ай бұрын
@MagicCarpetRideShareProject Love it all, but special nod for _Scanners_ and _Midnight_ _Run_ ... They seemingly don't make 'em like they used to ;)
@Sannspoof5 ай бұрын
"older classics like Fight Club" Time keeps on slippin...
@Novastar.SaberCombat5 ай бұрын
Time is the only resource. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope's strength resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)
@uniquechannelnames5 ай бұрын
Nooooo!!!! but for real it's like.. 25 years old... That'd be like a commentator in 1993 referencing a movie from 1968 man! To me it blows my mind that 2 and 1/2 decades have passed since it released. Makes my brain hurt.
@BinkyLoo425 ай бұрын
Yup. Saw it a couple of months ago at my local cinema as a 25th anniversary screening. Still love it as much now as when I saw it as a 19 year old. Also saw Network at a screening last night. Both have a lot to say about trusting the narrative and capitalism and were both mainstream movies. But stick in my mind and make me think.
@Scriptadiaboly5 ай бұрын
Also The Matrix 😂
@LocalAnonOnTheInternet5 ай бұрын
Slippin' slippin', into the fuuuuuutuuuuuure.
@Raymando5 ай бұрын
Anti-intellectualism is more harmful than plain ignorance.
@hitandruncommentor5 ай бұрын
True, but so is elitism.
@Roxor1285 ай бұрын
@@hitandruncommentor Unfortunately, the intellect frequently ends up as collateral damage when fighting the elites.
@Scriptadiaboly5 ай бұрын
@hitandruncommentor what's elite in movies???
@magicbuns48685 ай бұрын
@@hitandruncommentor Yup, I call it pretentiousness. Put subtitles on when you watch a movie like Dune or the latest bladerunner. They literally don't make any sense once you READ the dialogue. It's just a load of big complicated words chucked together, with the clear intent of sounding smart, but it's absolute mush. I think our standards of "high cinema" have been seriously dropped. Pretentious, but meaningless dialogue, makes a 'good' movie these days apparently.
@Hawkeye42nd5 ай бұрын
@@magicbuns4868villeneuve has said something like that he would prefer movies didn’t even have dialogue at all. he’s a visual guy, and those are visually fantastic films, but they are intellectually / verbally totally underbaked (natural consequence of the director most basically only caring about how they look)
@kevincgrabb5 ай бұрын
What's your favourite food? "Hmmm, a margherita pizza with nice bufala. Some nice olives and prosciutto on the side?" Why are you lying? Just tell us it's carrots and ranch with Chicken McNuggets?
@JZStudiosonline5 ай бұрын
Hell nah, Meat Lovers all the way.
@kevincgrabb5 ай бұрын
@@JZStudiosonline When I was young I used to like that. Now I just want the spot-on dough, sauce and cheese to sing. Less is more.
@joeyjojojrshabadoo74624 ай бұрын
That's the perfect metaphor.
@JZStudiosonline4 ай бұрын
@@kevincgrabb I'm still arguing meat lovers. I've had decent pizza, but typically when I eat I want it to actually be filling and have more nutrition than just carbs and a couple pieces of lettuce.
@palynch5 ай бұрын
its not just cinema. if you try and have in depth conversation about any art form people automatically think you're pretentious. it makes me very slow to talk about stuff i'm really interested in cos people will think i'm weird.
@ahmorgan5 ай бұрын
Same
@toysarealive15 ай бұрын
Like many people who appreciate this channel, I'm into all kinds of media. I read when I can, and consume audio books when i can't. In my early 20s, I came to the realization that just because I wasn't in school, did not mean I had to stop learning, even through experiences if need be. I've been classically trained in the kitchen, and it's what I did professionally for about a decade. I'm back in school and about to receive a degree. What I'm saying is I've learned so much, am still hungry for more, and am excited to share it when I can. Someone recently told me, "You'd get along with my cousin. You guys are into THINGS." As if the default is just nonengagment with anything that challenges.
@Bnio5 ай бұрын
I had a (not-too-close) friend make a drunk offhand comment about how I probably ruin dates because I "go off about some book or whatever." Mind you, he was making up this scenario based on how I banter with more distant friends -- and it made me very thankful I keep a barrier between him and anything about my love life. But I thought it was pretty rich coming from him considering he will derail any conversation to talk about marijuana laws for 30 minutes straight. We all have our pockets of interest.
@authorified895 ай бұрын
@@Bnio Wise, only get close to people that respect your interests.
@WhatIsSanity5 ай бұрын
Mmhm this scornful attitude towards passion is very pervasive and I feel like it's been getting worse in the last couple of years. All my fictional passions are dead because of this, not just the franchises but whole genres of cinema have died in the last 20 years. Sucks when the only art you want to gab about is so long dead people don't even know what it is. I'm only in my 20s!! I'm far too young for this to be happening to me, and yet here I am.
@ForlornFea5 ай бұрын
Glad to see someone call out the commodification of relatability and the moralisation of taste. I run in poetry circles myself and it’s exactly the same thing. The end result is just people refusing to read empathetically, hating ambiguity and erasing expressions that they can’t project on.
@Novastar.SaberCombat5 ай бұрын
Every circle begins with its end. Reflection is key. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope's strength resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)
@njnjhjh89185 ай бұрын
Good thing I don't run in poetry circles. If it doesn't rhyme, I am unlikely to like it! :)
@milo_thatch_incarnate5 ай бұрын
I find "hating ambiguity" to be so true. Even the people I love most often hate the films I love because I love a lot of films that have ambiguous characters, plot points, and conclusions. I just like that. I like a well-done "open for interpretation" character or story. But almost no one else does.
@Volkbrecht5 ай бұрын
Here's the thing though: people by and large reject the "moralisation of taste". This stuff is failing the more aggressively it gets marketed. Art is, first and foremost, entertainment. Has always been, will always be. Fail to entertain and you'll be back to creating art as a hobby soon enough, because noone will pay you.
@ErmenBlankenberg5 ай бұрын
"Commodification of relatability" and "Moralisation of taste" how wonderfully succint phrases summarising these issues.
@mememachine-3865 ай бұрын
Oooo that opening made me mad. Yes I liked Star Wars and Iron Man, but one of the most impactful movies I saw as a kid was literally The Good The Bad and The Ugly. To pretend like that's some kind of fake snobby answer says more about those people than it does about me.
@jesustovar25495 ай бұрын
I went to a Star Wars film forum cycle, not only they were playing all six movies each saturday, but each sunday they played movies that influenced or were related to George Lucas in some way (Ben-Hur, Blade Runner, 2001: A Space Oddysey, Excalibur, The Good The Bad and The Ugly, and Apocalypse Now), growing up as a fan, I discovered so many wonderful movie classics due to my interest in researching what movies influenced my favorite directors such as George Lucas or Steven Spielberg, I even watched THX 1138 and American Graffiti, I wouldn't know Akira Kurosawa if it weren't for it.
@countbellalublowsi47025 ай бұрын
The Good The Bad and the Ugly isn't even that highbrow like it's literally just a great action movie... but people are assuming because it's older it must be something inaccessible.
@voidgods5 ай бұрын
The funny thing is, when Star Wars was made you could call it an indie title, no studio wanted it, and it just happened to have its breakthrough. That's why I avoid the doomer takes about "art is going to shit". I'm sure previous generations said the same, for different reasons. And when art does change, as Cormac implies in the video, yes art is a reflection of society and of the times. We can all appreciate classical music today, but as a genre it's no longer as relevant as it once was, or produced at a similar capacity or even quality - and that's fine. There will always be a divide between art made for money and art made for expression, and the eventual convergence of ideas that manage to do both and create new genres and classics. Art will be fine, and we already have classics of our time that will join the list of greats in 100 years, just like there were plenty of forgettable music, movies, books, paintings made in the past.
@joa14015 ай бұрын
@@voidgodsi agree with all of this. i’m passionately opposed to the rampant sterilisation and commercialisation of artistic expression. whenever i can i encourage people to expand their horizons and be truly curious. as a creator myself i am always calling out, and pushing back against, the smothering influence corporatism has on what gets made. but what i don’t do is say ‘art is doomed’. that’s not helpful. people don’t respond to prophecies of doom with positive, productive action. they respond with resignation and pessimism. it makes them less curious, less motivated to explore. and i just don’t believe it’s true. especially the narrative of art and art appreciation ‘going downhill’ and that society is getting dumber. i don’t have patience for that kind of ‘idiocracy’ portrayal of the average person, and for the cynical solipsism it seems to inspire in those who view themselves as intellectuals. we don’t have the same memory for the bad movies that came out in the 80s, or the 60s, or the 40s. the classics have risen to the surface since then, and canonised. we minimise the corporate aspects of their productions because those movies managed to transcend them. plus, we’re not from the 1940s, so we don’t feel pandered to by many of the filmmaking and writing decisions that were pandering to audiences of that era. i see reason to be thoughtful, wary, vigilant, critical. i see stuff we need to push back against. but i don’t see reason to be hopeless. i hope that we, who believe in the benefits of expanding one’s horizons and cinematic palette, can encourage this in others without coming off as condescending or judgemental. and i hope that we, too, are careful to examine our preconceived notions going into a film, whatever genre it might be, whenever it was made, and by whom.
@voidgods5 ай бұрын
@@joa1401exactly, great points, we must also remain cautious about the self-indulge of thinking our way of appreciating things is the most intelectually relevant way. People can have mentally taxing jobs and enjoy stupid movies, or the opposite, or both at the same time, there is no right or wrong way to enjoy art, and if you like something there will always be someone, somewhere else that enjoy the same things and then you can create and share appreciation about something between yourselves, without expecting the general audience to follow through - that is always how art worked, by it's nature. As for "negativity makes people less curious", that couldn't be more true.
@blaisetelfer84995 ай бұрын
What baffles me is how those TikTokers act like "I enjoy fun movies" is some sort of controversial hot take they need to defend. Blockbusters have $100+ million advertising campaigns and are made to appeal to as wide a market as possible, while the "foreign-sounding" movies they're mocking are lucky to have an audience at all. Deadpool 3, for example, is being shoved down my throat before it's even released, yet these people act like it's in a disadvantaged position. I'm a die hard Nolan and Villenueve fan, but I don't go around acting like the existence of lower budget, avant garde movies is somehow a threat to theirs.
@NadiaSeesIt5 ай бұрын
I think they were talking more about the sufferability of those who insist that nothing but those arthouse movies are worth watching.
@samuel.jpg.1080p5 ай бұрын
@@NadiaSeesIt well, the way they phrase their frustration create a different reaction. The way The Tiktokers said is instead more similar to the snobbish elitist that they hate on. The tiktokers act as if the "fun" and blockbuster movies are the only ones worth watching. One of the tiktoker clearly mock someone who enjoys 2001, I need to ask why? If the person genuinely enjoys 2001, then what's the problem? Why is she so insistent in mocking someone's favorite film when that person likes it not to be seen as an elitist?
@Gameruin3r5 ай бұрын
I'm a fellow huge Nolan fan and most people still acknowledge batman begins, dark knight, interstellar, and inception were amazing films. Memento is too odd duck, complex, confusing, and makes you have to analyze and think about things so npc or normies won't get it or like it...but I love it.
@Gameruin3r5 ай бұрын
Memento is one of the best films of all time. Everyone knows dark knight and inception...but memento will always be Nolans true masterpiece.
@DanLyndon5 ай бұрын
@@Gameruin3r Memento is the only Nolan film that is actually a great work of art. The rest are just popcorn movies with a bombastic soundtrack.
@cjbowers78005 ай бұрын
I remember a documentary years ago that examined how an over-abundance of choice paralysed decision-making. They did it with selling jams. In one version there were 50 different jam varieties; customers were so overwhelmed with choice that they didn't buy anything. As soon as they cut it to five choices, everyone bought it.
@jeannelagarde24895 ай бұрын
I didn't see the documentary you're talking about but I clearly remember seeing these statistics. It works for any streaming platform (that's why some end up scrolling for half an hour, and sometimes regret the film they picked up because they think there were so many others movies that would have been better), for the clothing industries (we use to have not more than 5 type of pants to try let's say, now we have... I don't even know, in just one shop, there's dozens of them). We really need to change the way we consume things in general.
@devononair3 ай бұрын
This is pretty well known to psychologists.
@tzrvines98625 ай бұрын
Nowadays, if you genuinely like "cinema", you are pretentious but if you watch content that everyone else is watching, you are a normal human being.
@codyhastings25165 ай бұрын
I have a feeling most people see making a distinction between a normal film and "cinema" as inherently pretentious.
@TheBatNick20245 ай бұрын
You are pretentious bc you act that way. IDGAFF what you watch or don’t watch. Just stop telling ppl what to see or attacking them bc of what they like. My list of favorite films has changed in some ways than when I was a kid. Some films kept their position or were elevated and others were gone entirely. No one is telling you what to enjoy or not enjoy. You are doing that to yourself bc you care more about what they think of you than you think of yourself.
@garuna56885 ай бұрын
You're not pretentious for liking cinema. You're pretentious for looking down on people who enjoy mainstream movies.
@redensign245 ай бұрын
liking cinema doesn't make a person pretentious. posting a selfie saying 'look what this important cinema I'm watching' does.
@lihns5 ай бұрын
I’ve really been shocked by how people now refer to all art as content now. But then again art probably has a similar overly-materialistic etymology
@davidegaruti25825 ай бұрын
"it's ok you can say you want to look smart" "no i like engaging with high concept ideas that strike me personally" "don't make me feel insecure !"
@jerryachtermann63995 ай бұрын
“High concept” means easy to explain quickly, and it’s used as a shorthand for a plot that’s immediately compelling and marketable without much explanation. I think you mean “complex” or even “low concept.”
@weatheranddarkness5 ай бұрын
@@jerryachtermann6399 ya, I think a lot of people would understand the use better in computer programming terms; when you line it up with the idea of low level programming, versus high level programming.
@pessien84745 ай бұрын
Yes because something like the "Light house" strikes you personally doesn't it? I mean, I understand that it has a subtext of mental illness born from isolation and what people can do in extreme situations but that took me, literally, a bit of scouring to research. And I don't even think the Lighthouse is up to my speed, because I watch shit like Fast and the Furious or Triple fucking X because they're FUN. Most of these people don't bother to even do as much, they probably watch an essay like this one and get on with it.
@GhostsRustyKnee5 ай бұрын
I've fully immersed myself in "made me smile" content she described. Id then watch more thought provoking content with lots of consideration gone into the writing and directing and found myself more emotionally enriched. The difference? I use my imagination a lot more with enriching story telling. I don't like how that is categorized as pretentious. These people need to exercise their imagination.
@NatureNaturePlease5 ай бұрын
😭 this is the sad reality
@gordyhowitzer5 ай бұрын
I have a well-meaning friend who keeps throwing away drafts of their novel because they're uncomfortable with the antagonist being too "problematic." Honestly I always kind of thought that was the point
@lkeke355 ай бұрын
I remember writing to my younger followers on Tumblr that it was okay to watch and even like "problematic" characters. That liking villains doesn't say anything about one's own identity. I don't think I was wrong in saying that. I've "liked" plenty of villains in my 5 decades of living, and didn't consider that it said anything about what kind of person I am or wanted to be.
@comradecameron37265 ай бұрын
You can hate a villain because of what they do. It’s what might make the book worth reading.
@LanceVanceDance845 ай бұрын
@@lkeke35 Bingo. One of my all-time favorite characters is V.M. Varga from season three of Fargo. Without getting into spoilers, he is an absolutely vile and reprehensible excuse for a human being, yet it's impossible to take your eyes off of him whenever he's on screen, he steals practically every scene he's in, and he is endlessly quotable (a big aspect of what makes him so memorable is the phenomenal performance of David Thewlis). But on the flip side, in reality I couldn't be less like that character. I'm extremely empathetic towards others, money and power aren't my top priorities, I believe in helping those in need, etc. Being a fan of a _fictional_ villainous character is in no way indicative of who you are or what you're like as a person. I'm also a fan of Michael Myers and the original Halloween, yet I have zero desire to actually hurt or kill anyone or see anyone actually get hurt or killed by a mask-wearing maniac who's wielding a knife. Anyone who jumps to the conclusion that you "must be a bad person" simply because you enjoy a villainous character in a fictional work is an absolute idiot who isn't worth your time.
@def3ndr8875 ай бұрын
That’s where you can make very interesting villains, recently my brother got me to watch JJK and I found myself loving the disaster curses Jogo and Mahito. Jogo despite little screen time was extremely interesting with his philosophy and showing how his faction thinks and want in life. Mahito despite all the hate he gets is the sole reason why I love the character, like what your friend sees as bad in an antagonist I see it as the best thing you can do to the character when writing them which is precisely what makes Mahito a good villain.
@Novastar.SaberCombat5 ай бұрын
Every circle begins with its end. Reflection is key. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope's strength resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)
@loganastrup68705 ай бұрын
Coming from someone who is in their mid twenties and loves cinema, one of the biggest issues I’ve had lately is people of my generation usually 15 to 25 years old are spending more and more time on social media for entertainment instead of watching cinema or reading books. And spending some time on social media isn’t bad, but imo when that’s mostly all you consume you’re training your brain to only take in short form content and you’re not challenging yourself. This leads to lazier and lazier behavior and shorter attention spans. And that just makes me sad.
@christijanrobert16275 ай бұрын
Cinema must now unfortunately compete with TIk Tok. Like organic fruit competing with Jelly Beans and M&Ms.
@masteroffear57625 ай бұрын
Entertainment has been shifting from what was available to exchange information such as television and cinema also radio to internet and social media which is in our phone. Entertainment has changed into short-form, and being automatically choosing what is favorable for us because of our clicks and engagement thanks to algorithm. It has never been more passive for us to interact with such entertainment and it has changed from actively seeking into passively receiving it.
@sword_of_damocle54 ай бұрын
Content algorithms need to be regulated in the same way that gambling, nicotine, and alcohol were. Shortened attention spans, always chasing the next "high," low tolerance for displeasure...these are clear signs of addiction and need to be treated as such.
@Seasonal-Shadow_46744 ай бұрын
@loganastrup6870 they only engage in cinema and books that say nothing new
@macksequeira42334 ай бұрын
Rightly said, these people will only enjoy over the top senseless films without proper script.
@mikeciul85995 ай бұрын
I thought it was weird to hear about people relating to Joker in a positive way. For me he was relatable, but I took that as a _warning,_ not as a point of pride. The power of the movie for me was to show a part of myself that I'm uncomfortable with, and motivate me to find healthy ways to integrate it. If cautionary tales aren't relatable, they're not doing their job!
@def3ndr8875 ай бұрын
Probably because that’s the point, a lot of people feel trapped and when the only thing friend groups, family, society, or whatever social groups you’re a part of say to deal with it or be shamed until you do makes people like Joker very appealing because in a way he’s free unlike the people that relate to him.
@spejic15 ай бұрын
@@def3ndr887 Sure we all feel that way more or less, but given humanity's history of revolutions, schisms, and movements, this is hardly some unique feature of the current era. "Joker" isn't just about a figure with relatable aspects, it's a full character that responds to that situation in a particular way and the movie explores that. Don't forget that this is the birth story of a really bad guy. It's not a guide for us to follow.
@def3ndr8875 ай бұрын
@@spejic1 that’s what makes this era disturbing and pushes the question of whether our society is doing enough to alleviate the majority of plights its people must endure, and if not will they learn or will a revolt be the only way to solve it.
@spejic15 ай бұрын
@@def3ndr887 Yes, our society seems designed to increase loneliness and alienation because it is profitable.
@njnjhjh89185 ай бұрын
It is a warning, but changing yourself still isn't the point in my not so humble opinion. A broken man was allowed to do horrible things because of a horrible system. Even if you think I'm wrong, what is one to do when their act of self-defense (being repeatedly kicked on the ground is easily deadly btw) brought on by helping another is portrayed as a monstrous act?
@BobEllwood5 ай бұрын
You've nailed it. When I see Tik Tok's talking about enjoying "fun" movies over black and white arthouse films, I wonder why they think so little of movies they find fun. Look at most of Spielberg's movies; they are pop culture juggernauts, but also revolutionized the industry and have a lot to say.
@nope56575 ай бұрын
Because people actively look down on art with contempt. Even the stuff they like.
@lkeke355 ай бұрын
I try to strike a balance and "enjoy" everything from anime, to art house, to pop culture and vintage. For me there's value in all of it. Am I really in the minority on that?
@AfutureV5 ай бұрын
It is also looks over the thousands of comedies made in black and white, Charlie Chaplin existed. Since cinema has existed, people have wanted to have fun and explore deep ideas, sometimes at the same time, shocking.
@DeepEye19945 ай бұрын
@@lkeke35 IKR like my top 20 favorite picks are a bit all over the place going from popular films like Planet Terror, Beetlejuice, The Elephant Man, Total Recall and Alien but also more culty/lesser known stuff like Mr. Nobody, Johnny Got His Gun, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Phantom of the Paradise and Balada Triste De Trompeta (aka The Last Circus). Artsy French films can also be a lot of fun to watch, Delicatessen and Playtime are almost like live-action cartoons. I know people hate snobs, but I feel like snobs would at least appreciate that I have an open mind and want to check out deep cut films, while those Tik Tokers would have a "DOES NOT COMPUTE" meltdown because I dare love both commercial and "artsier" stuff. I wouldn't be surprised if by their standards The Elephant Man (*GASP!* Black and white!! Nooo!!!) and Alien are too "brainy and boring" if 2001 (which I love and is included in my top 20) and Good The Bad and the Ugly are "pretentious".
@Bnio5 ай бұрын
You've hit upon something here. Blockbusters and arty films don't have to be mutually exclusive. I think a lot of the filmmaking of studio big releases of late is falling victim to this, and we (the audience, review culture) seem shocked, over and over, when something popular actually tries to have its own voice. I think a recent example is the surprise people had over the recent Shogun TV series. The surprise being that they could not predict what is usually predictable in these types of stories. Save the Cat has ruined audiences, to the point that NOT adhering to its advice is now compelling storytelling because we are so used to where the character and plot beats are supposed to pop up.
@MephiticMiasma5 ай бұрын
Sadly, most of those advocating that we "learn to face being uncomfortable" have in mind someone else being made uncomfortable, not themselves.
@henrique88t5 ай бұрын
Woah, THIS.
@AfutureV5 ай бұрын
Not to get specifically political, but I do see people blanket claiming things like “People of X political leaning do not make good art”, and then you ask what have they watched that made them reach that conclusion and it is either they have watched nothing or have watched the most extreme art made by that position. It is fine if gore or animal cruelty makes you uncomfortable and you avoid movies that have these things, but I believe it is unhealthy if just different ideas you disagree make you uncomfortable enough to not even engage with them. It would be better to try to understand them in art rather than in the ballot box, when discussion may be long over.
@MayorOfEarth795 ай бұрын
...wait, I'm confused. Does that include LSOO? Cause I feel like LSOO is preaching that idea and being open about it. I think by saying that "those who are advocating this" is like, an obfuscation and projecting to a vague type of other person who exists.
@CornerTalker5 ай бұрын
@@AfutureV I couldn't watch "the Graduate." I suppose I would also avoid a film if I thought it was actively promoting evil.
@binaryvoid01015 ай бұрын
TOLERANCE is not always a two-way street, nor should it be. Asking intolerant people to be more tolerant (and face their discomfort) doesn't mean we, in return, have to tolerate their intolerance.
@dr5t3v35 ай бұрын
My father liked westerns, a lot. When we were growing up, he and I (and sometimes my mom and/or sister) would sit together and watch Stagecoach, or True Grit, or High Plains Drifter. The last thing we ever did together, as he lay on his deathbed, was watch The Good, The Bad and The Ugly. Just... the best. Not very relatable, though...
@jesustovar25495 ай бұрын
I have a similar relationship with my Great Uncle, he grew up with westerns, I went to his house, sat and watch whatever there were playing in Fox Classics, today he mostly watches action movies or some old western from 60 or 70 years ago.
@kurosawaftw73765 ай бұрын
I watched The Wild Bunch right after my grandfather passed, he recommended it to me on his deathbed. I relate.
@muhammadraiyanhaziq4 ай бұрын
Ah yes, The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. I love the music composition, close-ups of characters and the chemistry both Blondie and Tuco has with one another although they’re frenemies in a sense, since they’re constantly stabbing each other’s backs
@RtB684 ай бұрын
I'd add the outlaw Josie Wales to that list.
@majimasmajimemes11565 ай бұрын
This "relatability" trend is a direct response to our increasing isolation in everyday life. Human connection is being sold back to us for a profit.
@nori_yah5 ай бұрын
underrated comment
@finndelimatamay19835 ай бұрын
I think it also provides an insight into modern society's psychological age. Like, my parents told me that they have memories of teenagers meeting up in groups to see Rain Man when it came out, and that they can't even imagine something like that happening now. And to be clear, they're not just dismissing it as "Oh, kids these days bad." They have said, and I agree, that if you've been sold nothing but empty superhero and transformers movies your whole life, then that's obviously going to affect your development. And I think we're seeing the effects of that nowadays.
@cool_sword5 ай бұрын
I've spent a lot of time watching video essays, and it's shockingly rare - maybe just because of the recommender or my own habits - that a video essay exposes me to a new way of thinking. Yours do that pretty consistently. You write these like you actually want people to sit and reflect on them, not just to passively consume something they already agree with in a slick audiovisual format. In these respects, I get out of your videos what I like getting out of written essays. Keep up the good work!
@Novastar.SaberCombat5 ай бұрын
Reflection is most definitely both key and lock. I wish that humanity participated in it far more often. Unfortunately, it *does* require training, insight, work, silence, etc. Most are far too busy with the hustle and bustle of "busy-ness" to stop and think for even 3-6 meager moments. Must give us pause. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope's strength resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)
@Seasonal-Shadow_46744 ай бұрын
@@Novastar.SaberCombat And people nowadays struggle to admit they are wrong
@RiotousRavioli4 ай бұрын
so true! Only five minutes into the video and I was like, shit this is some really insightful stuff he's saying. So I opened my notes app and wrote down some things that resonated and gave me more understanding of the issue. Before I realized, I was already jotting down reflections of my own, making connections with other stuff I had been thinking about before, etc. That's what a good (video) essay does. Really appreciate this channel!
@Advent35465 ай бұрын
Is it so hard for people in those tiktoks to believe that people actually do enjoy the "pretentious cinema with foreign-sounding names" because they think they are good movies? I hate that dismissive attitude so much! Flames on the side of my face!
@luxinvictus90185 ай бұрын
snobs definitely exist. I've known a few pseudos who simply can't enjoy normal things, who always have to be 'different' because they think that liking popular stuff is beneath them. but on the other side are people who only consume the latest mainstream trend that is spoonfed to them every month. Their entire existence revolves around consuming cheap, bland, commercialised 'content' There has to be balance. We must find a world somewhere between reddit and tiktok.
@DonaldAMisc5 ай бұрын
"Breath, heaving breaths, heaving" 😉
@Advent35465 ай бұрын
@@luxinvictus9018 I always strive for that balance as much as possible. Movie fans, even the casual fans, deserve better than MovieTok
@Advent35465 ай бұрын
@@DonaldAMisc See you get it!
@mightisright5 ай бұрын
These people have been around the whole time. They just didn't have a virtually free way of spewing their mental diarrhea to millions of people at a time. I grew up in the 80s and 90s and at video rental stores 90% of people wanted whatever came out that week in the New Arrivals section. The thousands of VHS tapes in the middle of the store were almost always available because a small minority of people cared to rent anything old or classic.
@stevens57755 ай бұрын
The barbie doll was a surprise hit back in the late 50s. Because marketers assumed that little girls wanted dolls that were basically just them, little girls. but , i think, it turned out that little girls had just as much passion and excitement for imagining, perhaps fantasizing, and acting out what it would be like to be a fully developed and flourishing adult, being the best version of their adult self, and maybe, lol, also having it all (a career and a family). But I guess it is true that the barbie was and always meant to be the “literally me”.
@DrAngelKins5 ай бұрын
Atleast barbie tried tho.
@dontknowdocare5 ай бұрын
You realize that the Barbie creator just stole the doll (from a German doll) and copied her one to one? The original manufacturer had no idea this was going in and Mattel later bought the original doll so they wouldn't get sued. Barbie has no message except that theft is alright
@AveragepoliticsEnjoyer5 ай бұрын
@@dontknowdocareNobody cares
@borysvengerov33985 ай бұрын
It's much more enjoyable to relate to a character who's actually living the life you don't have. Tyler Durden's quote about why Narrator came up with him suites here well.
@Garthorium5 ай бұрын
@@AveragepoliticsEnjoyer Some people do, because this subversion of reality and context is intentionally and purposely misleading. We live in a world of smoke and mirrors, it's enlightening to peek behind the curtains on the stage to see the faces of the frauds that play center on the stage.
@helmutthat83314 ай бұрын
One term popping up in discussions around social media is "Main Character Syndrome," a form of narcissistic self-centeredness that people have where they almost seem to think of themselves as a main character is one of these movies, never getting seriously challenged and always succeeding. These people then get upset when the world doesn't align with their own heroes journey.
@samp.80995 ай бұрын
5:35 It's called tokenism. Everybody seem to have forgotten that word exists, yet it describes perfectly what's been going on lately
@bloodydominations9925 ай бұрын
What rekindled my passion for cinema is when I started collecting physical media again. When you are actively investing your time and money, you are more engaged in the product. There is also a much larger universe of films to explore with physical media, and that has led me to branch out way beyond my usual comfort zone with foreign films, independent filmmakers that i had no prior experience with, etc. When you mindlessly browse through streaming choices, it ends up being passive background noise.
@lorcan5455 ай бұрын
Yes. There isn’t really a way to prove that you get more out of a film because you’ve bought it on physical media, but I believe that my engagement with the filmographies of my favorite directors is not superficial. There is inconvenience and persistence involved in getting their films on physical media. Jonathan Rosenbaum has a book called ‘Placing Movies’. You literally place physical copies of your movies in a space in your home, but I feel that the effort involved in gathering a collection is another aspect of mentally placing a filmmaker and the meaning of their work in relation to yourself. I can’t say that people who just stream or more likely pirate everything can’t equally effectively engage with and mentally inventory the content and meaning of the work of great filmmakers. Ultimately this topic leads to a meta-consideration of what are we looking to get out of watching movies anyway?
@Afreshio3 ай бұрын
Sadly an impossible choice if you live in a thirdworld shithole. But I really love movies so I just pirate em and just enjoy. From any period or genre. I engage with respect and sincerity.
@Art-is-craft2 ай бұрын
The only way physical media will make a comeback would if it has some unique feature that streaming cannot do. Such an analogue picture quality that is so unique.
@janelmarie75715 ай бұрын
Ouch, that first video clip hurt. Yes, actually 2001 is my favorite movie. I've watched it dozens of times. I know everything about it, it is a true masterpiece.
@ChrisLeRose5 ай бұрын
Correct.
@uniquechannelnames5 ай бұрын
Yea I mean they're classics that millions love for a reason far beyond just being fashionable, they're excellently made films!! Ofc they're going to pop up more often. I'm more annoyed by the commentator's take on it, then people typically listing big time classics. Like does he want a world where everyone says Uhh "Primer", "La Haine", Rocky Horror" "Mulholland Drive" All of which are still cult classics by any metric except perhaps Primer. It's just a dumb perspective and has no understanding of probability
@unfgreen5 ай бұрын
I've never seen it because it is such a part of the zeitgeist that going back now and watching it seems pointless. I'm sure others feel the same way about Casablanca, but I don't think you can be a man without understanding Rick's dilemma.
@ChrisLeRose5 ай бұрын
@@unfgreen Watch for yourself and make up your own mind about it. Do you let others taste ice cream for you, too?
@scottmUTCS5 ай бұрын
Preach!
@samuel.jpg.1080p5 ай бұрын
I will never be ashamed of saying that most of my favorite movies are movies from Tarkovsky, Kurosawa, Miyazaki, Lumet, Coppola, Fellini, Lynch and Scorsese. Someone may say to me I'm an elitist snob, but so be it. Those movies are timeless and deeply important to me. It's not me being a snob and looking down on others who watch mainstream films, It's just what I enjoy the most, what I genuinely feel that those films are so great. On the other hand, I also like some mainstream films like John Wick, The Batman, etc. Heck, I love Dragon Ball and that is mainstream as hell. What I'm frustrated is some people really look down on others who like "art" films, just let them enjoy things they like
@NadiaSeesIt5 ай бұрын
I think you're really misinterpreting what they were saying. I believe there are many people who say only arthouse movies are worthwhile and these are the incredibly annoying people the videos at the beginning were referring to
@samuel.jpg.1080p5 ай бұрын
@@NadiaSeesIt I believe the opposite is also true; that there are many people who mock others who enjoy arthouse movies. One of the footage in the intro of this video clearly mock a person who enjoys The Good, The Bad and The Ugly even though that movie is not even an arthouse. It's a mainstream film which came out in 1966 yet it is still a mainstream film through and through. Annoying people exist on both sides. But mocking people who enjoy things because they genuinely enjoy it, not just to be an elitist snob is wrong.
@LuisAngel-mu4zv5 ай бұрын
@@NadiaSeesItThere's actually more people who mock those "art house" kinda films. In real life social circles i mean. Most film elitist are mainly online. I've met more people who think I'm pretentious, just for talking passionately about a movie (not even in an exaggerated way) only for someone to tell me "it's just entertainment bro, it's not that deep" I've met more of those people than the "film elitist" you mention
@norm-bb3bb4 ай бұрын
@@samuel.jpg.1080p Good for you with Tarkovsky, I was watching stalker and I stop watching after 40 minutes, maybe he's not my cup of tea, lol, I love Lumet, Lang and Kubrick though
@adamantiiispencespence40124 ай бұрын
It's just backlash the equal and opposite reaction against the crowd who used to look down on the kind of films.
@bigbrother34654 ай бұрын
I friend of mine called me "pretentious" because i like Die Hard...DUDE, IT'S AN ACTION FILM FROM 1988, AN ACTION FILM.
@devononair3 ай бұрын
Your friend is odd.
@CJojo_13_5 ай бұрын
By mocking foreign films, arthouse, and older movies, all these TikTokers are showing is that they have very narrow taste. People with good taste enjoy a large variety of art.
@Roescoe5 ай бұрын
Does it matter if you have narrow or wide taste?
@Roescoe5 ай бұрын
@@realmarsastro That was kind of a long answer to say no. I prefer depth vs breadth.
@smoadia855 ай бұрын
@@Roescoe aka shallow
@Roescoe5 ай бұрын
@@smoadia85 yup, those with only a breadth of taste are shallow because they don't have any particularly deep knowledge
@prometheus34985 ай бұрын
There's no such thing as "good taste", simply different taste. No disagreement with the rest of your comment.
@gabrielidusogie91895 ай бұрын
The crazy thing about the whole "liking obscure movies to be seem smart" is that it actually teaches you to appreciate what you like and dont like and forces you to explore movies you otherwise would've ignored and before you know it, you have found some new movies to like. It's a phase and Im glad I went through it otherwise I wouldn't have discovered François Truffaut and I love his movies. Ironically enough, his colleague, Godard, accused him of being too commercial and not pushing cinema further after Truffaut released Day For Night which by today's standards would be considered pretentious even though it is very much a soap opera drama albeit with some meta layers as the subject matter concerns the production of a film.
@lk_30995 ай бұрын
I'm tired of missing out on problematic traits on characters. The fact that not even villains can have unforgivable crimes under their belt is absurd.
@yucol56615 ай бұрын
Unforgivable crimes are boring and unproblematic tough. They don’t make you think, you already know as a given that they are that type of flat villain
@lk_30995 ай бұрын
@@yucol5661 I'll just agree to disagree there, those kinds of villains can absolutely be fun.
@JohnHolmes3.05 ай бұрын
Villains that will massacre entire villages but draw the line at bigotry are my favorite example of this.
@g5rearea5 ай бұрын
@@JohnHolmes3.0 My favorite example is The Joker punching Red Skull after he realizes Skull is a Nazi. Cuz he's a villain, but he's an American God dammit.
@samhutchison95825 ай бұрын
@@yucol5661 The irony of this take is that this take itself shows a really flat view of what villains must be. There is no single formula for what makes a good villain. A good villain is exactly what the story needs it to be in order to justify the conflict. Many stories need a complex villain. Others need a pompous fool who uses and abuses with no redeeming qualities. Some movies need their villain to be a Lovecraftian abyss of evil/harm. Sauron and Joffery Baratheon are considered amazing villains and they were never explained or humanized. They just were, and that's exactly what their stories needed them to be.
@citizenzeus16845 ай бұрын
It’s just so nice to have a nuanced, deep, intelligent, philosophical, and psychological exploration into movies and mind and culture. Thank you. I feel well fed by a nourishing and original meal.
@Daniel_Zalman5 ай бұрын
I think people are living isolated lives in front of screens all day. They’re craving human connection. A very basic human need. When basic needs aren’t met, man has little mental space for anything more complex. I’m guessing this relatability characteristic of current movies is a response to that. People want to feel less alone and if they see a character that they can project their own feelings on…the better. Complex characters would get in the way of that goal.
@sword_of_damocle54 ай бұрын
Your point about "neoliberal individualisation" felt like a breath of fresh air. You seem to know your history! A lot of people are unaware of the massive cultural shift that occured in the late 1970s to the point that they have so deeply internalized a hyper-individualist mindset. Every experience or act of consumption must be tailored to one's personal preferences/sensibilities, no matter how nonsensical doing so might be.
@devononair3 ай бұрын
Colour-coded garden shears is a good example! People actually think that life is improved by having the option to personalise a basic garden tool...
@licantropo865 ай бұрын
I feel increasingly frustrated with contemporary cinema. Of course, there are exceptions in mainstream cinema, and there are many good things to find outside of it as well. But over time, I find myself retreating more and more to the past, in search of art and beauty, to the great classics and masters.
@binaryvoid01015 ай бұрын
I think this collective discomfort around modern cinema can be attributed to the natural growing pains of studios adapting to cultural change: Older classics had protagonists and audiences that were mainly straight white males; therefore, the story didn't require the heavy exposition and thus the commodification of this demographic. Today, studios are willing to include marginalized identities BUT under the condition that they are commodified and thus made easily consumable by an audience that is still mainly straight, white, and male. Ambiguity and nuance in fiction can only be appreciated through narrative fluency and insight. Protagonists from marginalized groups in big budget studio films are made reductive because the average movie goer, frankly, see these groups in a reductive way and does not possess the cultural fluency and insight needed to appreciate the cultural nuances that have always existed within these groups.
@licantropo865 ай бұрын
@@binaryvoid0101 I think it’s not just a matter of gender or ethnicity. Fortunately today we have more diversity (although sometimes it’s fictitious and utterly hypocritical), but seeing it that way is very reductionist to understand the problem. That discourse is concerned exclusively with content as the only issue, leaving form simply as a shell. And in art, form is everything. I consider myself to be completely open to the narrative placing me in an ideologically unfamiliar place for the sake of art. I am an atheist, and the religiosity in Ordet moves me. I am straight, and most of my favorite romantic movies are queer. I consider myself politically left-leaning and enjoy the works of conservative right-wing authors like John Ford or Clint Eastwood. I am Latin American, and the sometimes exaggerated nationalism of American cinema doesn't bother me if it has an honest place in the narrative. And I could go on with many things that personally do not represent me at all… but for a moment, thanks to the power of art, they can reach me emotionally. The problem with much of today's cinema logic is that it ends up becoming just content, quick consumption, without room for reflection, metaphor, or confronting ideas we disagree with. It turns us into passive spectators instead of active and engaged participants in art.
@Novastar.SaberCombat5 ай бұрын
Exemplary (yet unknown) creators abound, but they'd rarely be recognized because they're not rich, powerful, influential, popular, etc. That's just how society functions. Kathleen Kennedy and Bob Iger are considered to be Gods, but it isn't because they have ethics, creativity, insight, storytelling skills, or passion. Reflection is key. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope's strength resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)
@etpadgett32665 ай бұрын
I find myself watching Turner Classic Movies more often & buying blu rays from boutique labels versus going to the theater & consuming stuff on streaming. The multiplex is not offering enough variety. As someone who interns at Film Threat, the fight against woke ideology is more about how it forces out those who’ve been in the industry (see the D-Files entry on veteran animators being pushed out of Disney) in favor of feeding an agenda that favors “diversity” for superficial PR. At the same time, the woke ideology lessens more nuanced stories in mainstream cinema in favor of hyping an overly self important message.
@speakatron56345 ай бұрын
@@licantropo86 I could not agree with you more.
@jackd.ripper14895 ай бұрын
i took my aunt and uncle to a screening of Dr Strangelove in the theatre. when the movie was over my aunt said it was one of the worst movies she’s ever seen in her entire life. i noticed about half way through it she gave up on the movie and started periodically checking her phone for the remainder of the movie. she said the scenes went on way longer than they should have and it was really stupid, that’s why she didn’t like it. i asked her what she thought of the production design, she said she didn’t see anything great about it. then she went on to ask what General Ripper and Mandrake’s characters had to do with the plot, she wasn’t paying attention, she then refused to believe that it’s one of my favourite films of all time (hence my screen name). it was such a frustrating night. she’s in her early 40’s btw.
@lindamalote17195 ай бұрын
What I hate is that people are unwilling to engage. Dislike it by all means, hate it by all means but atleast engage with the work and have genuine thoughtful reasoning. As soon as you name something "pretentious" as a favourite, they dont even want to engage with all the possible reasons you enjoy it and the places in which you find meaning in the work, which would consequently open them up to a broader perspective, it doesn't mean they have to like it once you explain. But having two opposing views is literally the only way can say they've looked at something wholeistically, which is a dying trait in the modern world.
@jesustovar25495 ай бұрын
WTF??? Dr. Strangelove is one of Kubrick's most accesible movies, maybe even more than 2001, the movie is not even that long or difficult to understand. But I get your frustration, one night I sat to watch it with my Mom, she got the context of when it was made, appreciated the photography and set design, just didn't thought it was funny, maybe if she watched it dubbed in spanish she would have laughed (we're latinos, american and british comedy is usually considered cold), it also happens that she isn't a fan of Peter Sellers (yes we watched The Pink Panther and I love it), nothing against George C. Scott tho, she likes him as Patton. Btw, if you're wondering, we have watched Kubrick's filmography together, her favorites are Barry Lyndon (she loves period dramas) and The Shining (saw it back when it came out).
@samuel.jpg.1080p5 ай бұрын
@@lindamalote1719 really agree on this. You can criticize all you want but please engage with the work, watch it fully and form your opinions. It's so bizarre, it's as if a person goes to a restaurant which serve a certain dish and that person don't want to eat the dish but then they complain about the dish. Wtf
@jeannelagarde24895 ай бұрын
There's one rule I'm imposing myself at cinema and it's to never check my phone during the movie. For respect for the people behind the movie, for the spectators who don't want to see a flashing screen in the middle of the room, but also because I want to be able to say when I get out, I loved/liked/disliked/hated the movie. There's other rules I'm imposing myself at cinema, but the phone is a big no-no. And I will always hate people who take it out during a screening to check it all the time (I can accept one time or two, if the light is to a minimum).
@jadonk-r44145 ай бұрын
@@jeannelagarde2489I have the same rule, especially for when I see something in theaters. I think it’s disrespectful to the people around me and the people who worked on the film. Also I might miss something if I tune out. It’s fine if people don’t want to watch something that challenges them in uncomfortable ways, but it is insane that they then act like everyone who does enjoy films like these are lying or trying too hard.
@mraleigh56275 ай бұрын
This is a challenging argument that I believe demands additonal debate. Barbie was comfort food, but there's plenty of comfort food in the 80s. People still showed up for a 3-hour biopic in Oppenheimer. The Boy and the Heron was a big opening for a slowly-moving fantasy. I don't feel Cinema is dead, it's just changing. I do think people are thirsty for challenging stories, but they're tough to find in a sea of data. I do watch videos like this to find gems like The Settlers.
@josecarlosmoreno97315 ай бұрын
Barbie was boring, silly in an unfunny manner, and its political messaging was mindless preaching (the fact anyone "related" to that speech just speaks to the abysmal state of our society in terms of any intellectual and emotional capacity). Oppenheimer was marketed like crazy and while the cinematography was good (though mostly the same cliche style that screams Oscar bait rather than actual love of the craft) it was also full of dumb shit like a needless sex scene, a failure to show the actual aftermath of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the impact the bomb had on the people it hit and the world at large, generally an over obsession with the person of Oppenheimer (or rather movie characterization which was mostly uninteresting) rather than his role in the world and an over obsession with the Manhattan project in the least interesting manner possible. It also did not seriously question any of the myths and narratives of WWII or the Cold War despite flirting with doing so.
@Chrisratata5 ай бұрын
@@josecarlosmoreno9731 if people related to it then they related to it. You passing judgement on it doesn't make it any less real for those people
@aSpectrumofDorky5 ай бұрын
I was looking for this comment. I agree that it’s a challenging argument and I don’t like how decisive the comments are. They claim to love cinema and then don’t bring anything but agreement to the table. This video has rubbed me the wrong way. I went in excited to hear the point being made because I love both comfort and cinematic media but now I’m struggling to finish it because every point that has been made has sparked some from of disagreement from me.
@your_mom_is_my_dad5 ай бұрын
It all depends on who the comfort was for. I doubt Barbie was comfort for ultra conservatives. Same as how movies with sexist depictions of women from back in the day will not be comfort food for many women today while it could go over some other people's head completely. It really depends on the kind of group you belong to and what kind of person you are, lol. For me Oppenheimer was more comfort food than Barbie since I knew it was based on real events, it created a kind of "you know what's gonna happen/there will be no accidents happening in this particular scene" and what happens happens because it happened this way in real life, and because of being a huge physics nerd it was what I enjoyed and knew. With Barbie, I was more stressed out with the plot and engaged in a way that I wanted the characters to overcome the struggles between the genders, I really was curious what solution they'd choose. It was also something closer to real life for me, so the struggles actually felt very relatable at time and it got me thinking about our world and my own life, some views being challenged. The thing is, as long as we keep mentally challenging movies and feel good movies, or both of these qualities within one movie, nothing is wrong with these kinds of movies because you can always go and watch the other type. I think only one kind or only the other kind being produced would both kind of suck.
@SuperBat635 ай бұрын
@@josecarlosmoreno9731 "Oppenheimer was marketed like crazy and while the cinematography was good (though mostly the same cliche style that screams Oscar bait rather than actual love of the craft) it was also full of dumb shit like a needless sex scene, a failure to show the actual aftermath of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the impact the bomb had on the people it hit and the world at large, generally an over obsession with the person of Oppenheimer (or rather movie characterization which was mostly uninteresting) rather than his role in the world and an over obsession with the Manhattan project in the least interesting manner possible. It also did not seriously question any of the myths and narratives of WWII or the Cold War despite flirting with doing so." That's because the film is called Oppenheimer, it's about Oppenheimer, it's not called "the atomic bomb that ended WWII and changed history" dumbass. It's every bit a character study as one of Nolan's earliest films like Memento.
@originaozz5 ай бұрын
I also love how Rogert Ebert described movie as "machine that generates empathy". It really nails why many film I enjoy make me relate to characters with experience I'll never come close to or actions I'll never agree upon. Relatability shouldn't be treated as sameness to someone, but an opportunity to understand that someone so different can share the same human emotions as us.
@FrenchLegitimist4 ай бұрын
It's just that most people don't like movies ; they like the movies they like. To put it in an other way, they see cinema not as an art form, but as an entertainement.
@devononair3 ай бұрын
This is true, but I doubt it is a new phenomenon. Most people have "art" on their walls, but the majority have watercolours of landscapes or animals, and those same people say "modern art is a load of rubbish." I think that it is true and probably has always been true that the majority of people want to work, play and relax, and not think deeply about why we are here. During the renaissance, art patrongs would have paintings commissioned and the artists would insert hidden meaning in the work, and the patrons would never realise. True art exists for the few people who really want to think about why we are here, and perhaps, maybe enlighten a few of the masses along the way.
@FrenchLegitimist3 ай бұрын
@@devononair This is true : it has always existed, and it exists for all artform. It is more obvious today because art has never been more accessible
@Michael0663-qo4wx5 ай бұрын
Art is a reflection of society and our society is bleak.
@binaryvoid01015 ай бұрын
Society is transitioning. We are in the teenage years of the age of information. Change can be long, awkward, and ugly but it doesn't mean the world is ending.
@Michael0663-qo4wx5 ай бұрын
@@binaryvoid0101 The world IS ending, literally, from global warming.
@christijanrobert16275 ай бұрын
I agree. Look at modernist (ie. from the school of modernism) architecture. Bleak. Look at music: soulless and digitized. Look at literature, either caked in identity politics or fluff. But I feel a Renaissance is on the way. Nowhere to go but up.
@jeannelagarde24895 ай бұрын
@christijanrobert1627 I really like what you said "a Renaissance is on the way". I've always been a pessimist about the futur (for the politics, the arts, the humankind, etc.), but with that little sentence, that made remind that the human species had been here for thousands of years, there's been a lot of different eras, and it wouldn't be a surprise that a new era, a new Renaissance, is coming in the next century. I'm hopeful that people will start realizing that corporations and politics don't care about us, but just the money we have in our pockets and will start to not care about them anymore.
@christijanrobert16275 ай бұрын
@@jeannelagarde2489 Hope springs eternal. But yes, I firmly believe it. In Harold Bloom's book the Western Canon, a book that predicted much of the identity politics and tribal squabbling going on, he believes a new age of invention and inspiration is on the horizon. When the book was written in the late 90s, he mourned the academies in their bid to unseat Shakespeare for being 'a dead white European male'. Meanwhile, these days, people are becoming more aware of corporations trying to separate us from our money. I also think of a Simpson episode where the town is dealing with giant marketing mascots running amok. Lisa tells the people 'just don't look' at them (i.e. the more attention they gain, the stronger they become and the more harm they can do). I say the same with films that do not appeal to our humanity. Don't watch them.
@williamdixon-gk2sk5 ай бұрын
I'm 38, but as a child the "man w/ no name" trilogy was legitimately my favorite. (Fistful of $$$'s/for a few dollars more/good the bad & the ugly)
@edengostelow5775 ай бұрын
Don’t get me wrong, the good the bad and the ugly is decent, but a bit overrated I think. But a few dollars more is incredible for me
@Novastar.SaberCombat5 ай бұрын
Hero's journeys are pretty awesome. The "blank slate" character quickly grows into its own personality, but it allows an audience to go on the adventure WITH them (or "as" them) just as rapidly. However... even Marty McFly, Frodo, Luke, Neo, Harry, and many others made their own choices, totally independent of any given audience's. You are NOT the writer. They are not catering to *your* version of their story... they've written it so that you understand THEIRS. Reflection is key. 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind's journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul's fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope's strength resteeled. But to earn final peace at the universe's endless refrain, we must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)
@williamdixon-gk2sk5 ай бұрын
@edengostelow577 for a few dollars more is the best of the three, I was just saying that hipster made it out like you have to be a psuedo-intellectual to love t.g.t.b.&.t.u. but I loved when I was 12. That's all.
@edengostelow5775 ай бұрын
@@williamdixon-gk2skright!? Like the film has one of the most recognisable soundtracks, with one of the most iconic actors, in one of the most popular film genres to have existed. Not exactly a hidden gem
@williamdixon-gk2sk5 ай бұрын
@edengostelow577 great point. Even if you don't know the source, that iconic score has been copied a million times. It is THEE soundtrack that instantly means "wild west showdown." Everyone knows it.
@dreambotter63895 ай бұрын
People want content instead of Cinema.
@Gormbauer5 ай бұрын
Content is more marketable than cinema and therefore more available for people to "want"
@ENigma-um8zw5 ай бұрын
Most don’t even have the cultural context to know the difference.
@TakliBansuri5 ай бұрын
I really woke up to truth huh.
@jmgonzalez45 ай бұрын
Nah, people are just too used to being disappointed, to being treated like children. Humans still desperately, in their core, desire to be wowed, to be in awe, inspired, shaken, moved.
@di34865 ай бұрын
@@jmgonzalez4unfortunately not true for most.
@johnsnow18635 ай бұрын
Bradbury saw this coming. He wrote about this specifically in Fahrenheit 451
@alexandrebeaudry83775 ай бұрын
Buying wall tv to allow big brother to be omnipresent
@DanLyndon5 ай бұрын
@@alexandrebeaudry8377 Big Brother? You're thinking of a different book.
@alexandrebeaudry83775 ай бұрын
@TondersWonders I know.... It was meant more as an expression of the omnipresent of the government in F451. The big difference from 1984 is that they choose to have tv surrounding them all the time. It represents better our reality.
@houston-coley5 ай бұрын
Dude, those first few clips triggered a fight or flight response in me.
@hfgr24025 ай бұрын
Same, and I don't know how to fly so...
@molanohouse29 күн бұрын
They seem to be rage bait, without being actually made as a rage bait.
@purekinema5 ай бұрын
You can appreciate complex, difficult films that require intellectual work and engagement while also appreciating "easier to consume" films that offer subtle, sensitively acted, and heartbreaking storytelling. They are two different forms of art that achieve different purposes - it's not that complicated. The essay this video references calls out Close and The Whale, which are both incredible and life-changing films, just because they are not the difficult films that the author prefers.
@laffycade31515 ай бұрын
This right here! This is the kind of balance we need Also which author are you referring to? Caitlin Quinlan?
@purekinema5 ай бұрын
@@laffycade3151 Yes
@laffycade31515 ай бұрын
@@purekinema I agree even more with you then, although the article is interesting enough, it feels too reductive of those movies and honestly a little pretentious. Also I believe relatability can be used in the right way to invite the viewer and get them comfortable so as to later challenge them. This way the viewer can be more inviting to confrontation. Relatability doesn't have to be the end point. Wish the author was more nuanced on her piece and not hold her own standards for a good storytelling as the only way.
@purekinema5 ай бұрын
@@laffycade3151 Yes, boiling these movies down to "relatability" misses almost everything they are trying to say and that people have said about them. Also, it is strange that they bring up The Whale as a film about relatability and self-recognition - I doubt many people's main takeaway from that movie is how much they relate to Charlie. Sure, it and the other movies they've mentioned may not be particularly intellectually challenging, but that's not inherently a bad thing - every film is aiming for something different.
@Portents-Magic-imagination5 ай бұрын
I like listening and reading all opinions on films. It’s the engagement we are lacking which is why I like the video.
@luxinvictus90185 ай бұрын
Thanks for making your videos. You've cultivated a nice community of like minded people. I feel a strong connection to everything you say and everyone here. A community who still value depth and quality but aren't elitist or snobbish.
@sagniksarkar24715 ай бұрын
Dare i say, you find them relatable.
@luxinvictus90185 ай бұрын
@@sagniksarkar2471 Indeed. I think they are literally me :) *we are legion.* We will terrorize the world with nuanced opinions and an above average attention span.
@laffycade31515 ай бұрын
@@sagniksarkar2471oh no, certainly this channel is doomed now
@AidanKedzierski5 ай бұрын
My favorite movies I’ve seen this month are In the Mood for Love, La Chimera, and Monster. And tonight I’m going to see Jaws in theaters for the first time. I am in the phase of seeing so many movies for the first time and I’m experiencing so much awe and continually exploring new directors and I’m having a great time.
@BasePuma40075 ай бұрын
2001 A Space Odyssey is a seminal movie. It doesn't flow the way we expect entertainment to flow in this day and age, but it was an excellently written story incorporating what was known at the time about what the realities of living in space would be like. It has influenced our culture in so many ways as well, from how it's plot has inspired countless other sci-fi movies such as Interstellar, to the way it presented AI. I genuinely don't understand how someone could sit and watch that movie and not be interested in it. It is still the best space movie. These are the same people that probably thought Blade Runner 2049 was boring... The Avengers super hero movie Instagram and tik tok age of entertainment has completely ruined so much big budget entertainment. It's concerning, because I think big budget movies with some kind of subtle underlying artwork, and metaphor like Titanic, Blade Runner (old or new version), 2001 A Space Odyssey, even Oppenheimer, are really important for cultural development. People spending more and more of their entertainment hours on mindless cheap thrills makes our civilization dumber and less thoughtful of other people's experiences.
@amberhawke5 ай бұрын
I can't say that I cared for 2001 A Space Odyssey when I saw it originally on the big screen. I found 2001 A Space Odyssey visually stunning and engaging, however it did not capture my fancy as I did not understand the story at all. Only after I read both Arthur C. Clarke's short story, "The Sentinel" and the book, which I enjoyed immensely, did the movie, which I re-watched, finally make sense. Ever since that experience 40+ years ago, I have recommended to anyone interested in watching 2001, to read the book first.
@BasePuma40075 ай бұрын
@@amberhawke I agree wholeheartedly, the book is a better experience.
@ThisisFizban5 ай бұрын
The movie never appealed to me and I didn't understand why until I read the book. Stanley Kubrick's movies tend to be quite pessimistic which doesn't fit with the fantastic ideas that Arthur C. Clarke is proposing.
@devononair3 ай бұрын
Some people just aren't interested in sci-fi.
@tobyhallitt79235 ай бұрын
Please never stop making these videos. Your commentary really captures a feeling I think we all know too well today, in a way that not too many people are able to. I love what you do.
@Augustus_Imperator5 ай бұрын
I think what's lacking most of all is the willing tot ake risks both by studios and by directors. A very similar thing is happening in the gaming world, where studios and devs just re-release over and over the same games or very similar games that are empty copies of what vame before because it worked, and they don't want to take risks with new ideas and they try to appeal to the widest possible audience, which can't give a proper deep story and mechanics.
@devononair3 ай бұрын
This is a good point.
@Bnio5 ай бұрын
Pretentious moment here: My favorite movie is Lawrence of Arabia. But hear me out. The movie spoke to me; not the character. At first I thought he did, but it turns out Lawrence is literally NOT me. It argues against the notion that Lawrence was good and righteous and won in the end. No. The story breaks Lawrence while also making him a legend, and you understand how it happened. You can see glimmers of how you might do the same thing in Lawrence's position, and also definitely not in others. And that's the greatness of the storytelling. Also, doesn't hurt that it is one of the most spectacular achievements in cinema from a technical side. Edit: And to note the part in this video about giving time to a movie and all that, I was talking to my 17-year-old nephew recently about movies. He's really, really into cinema and '60s and '70s music right now. It seems to be a genuine exploration of art. But when I said I love Lawrence of Arabia, he said he hadn't seen it, because, "Isn't it, like, super long?" When I pointed out that he has had no problem bingeing six hours of a TV show, it gave him pause. But not really. It is still perceived as a different use of screen time.
@pastlife9605 ай бұрын
Great take, sublime movie. Immerses you in its world like no other. Yet, in many modern senses, it is problematic. For a film set in Arabia there are next to no Arab actors playing names characters. Instead they use brownface. When I tell some people it’s one of my favourites I get called a racist, which is a fair knee jerk response. Why would I love a film with racist depictions unless I agree with those depictions? People seem to have forgotten that no piece of art is perfect, every one is influenced by the time and place it was created in, and every one has something good or bad to be praised or learned from respectively.
@lkeke355 ай бұрын
I too love that movie despite it being "problematic (white savior issue). A lot of younger people like to point out a movie's problems as a reason to not like that movie, but I don't think like that. You can see a movie has some issue and still love it, and critiquing a movie doesn't just mean pointing out just it's negative aspects.
I don’t think your love for Lawrence of Arabia should be pretentious at all!
@jesustovar25495 ай бұрын
There's a documentary series on Netflix called "Voir", one of the chapters spoke about unlikable characters, which included Lawrence of Arabia and Michael Corleone.
@Raysberry4 ай бұрын
I never realized how often people were trying to find relatability while watching a movie. Most of the time for me, the experience of watching a film has always been about immersing myself in a different world or exploring unique perspectives. Take, for instance, Sin City, one of my favorite films. Although I couldn't relate to the volatile characters, I found it captivating to delve into their world and observe the dynamics of government, gangs, and relationships unfold over the course of 2 hours. I’ve always thought that the allure of cinema lies in the creation of immersive story worlds and compelling storytelling. Perhaps I simply have an imaginative mindset and prefer to appreciate the narrative presented to me rather than constantly seeking personal connections. Also to add, I’m not knocking those who want to watch something relatable (I do sometimes as well) this was just a very interesting perspective and well made video that opened my mind up to how others enjoy cinema!! Fyi: This is just some thoughts I had about pt 1. Open discussion or critiques is more than welcomed!!
@bespectacledheroine72925 ай бұрын
Barbie is the most excited I've been for a mainstream film in years, get its name out of your mouth. Its homages speak with a bullhorn of its love for cinema. It HAS a message worth telling.
@shieldtrigger5 ай бұрын
A message been told since ten years ago with the deepness of ten years ago. Do me a favor and go love the movie, if it makes you happy, but it was never a message "worth telling" when it's the default message.
@bespectacledheroine72925 ай бұрын
@@shieldtrigger Except it's not. Point me in the direction of another movie that cares simultaneously about the problems facing both women and men. Barbie apologizing to Ken for treating him disposably isn't anything girl boss feminism in media has allowed. The fact that it pissed off two camps by "not being feminist enough" and "man-hating" is why I'm so obsessed with it. Like any necessary movie, it ruffled feathers.
@peonylarkspur6454 ай бұрын
Exactly, the scene where Barbie realizes she wants to be the creator and not the creation hit so hard as a female creative, I know that one came from Greta’s heart
@bespectacledheroine72924 ай бұрын
@@peonylarkspur645 I think it's beautiful in a way the biggest films used to be but haven't been in a long time, and wanting to play contrarian about it just because it was massive comes across as dismissing what's so clearly there. It's women getting their own Truman Show but even that is just scraping the surface.
@irishtom305 ай бұрын
Level one: My favourite movie is the Avengers! Level five: My favourite movie is the Bicycle Thief! Level 99: My favourite movie is Maniac Cop 2
@Theomite5 ай бұрын
Level 1098: CADDYSHACK II is better than CADDYSHACK.
@hfgr24025 ай бұрын
You really got it
@jasongiannaros40915 ай бұрын
It's sad that as a society we no longer nurture creativity, curiosity, new ideas, and stepping outside of our comfort zones - in films, but also other forms of art. Part of that is algorithms, but a lot of it is people just becoming intellectually lazier in the ironically-named "Information Age" too. Ask anyone the you meet the last time they read a serious book and that gives you a great idea of where we're at societally.
@GlazeonthewickeR5 ай бұрын
Cynicism is easy. Meet some cooler people. Don’t let your little bubble of a life define your perspective of the average person. You’re no better than them.
@braelhawke21895 ай бұрын
The problem is not the people so much as companies needing to grow every year to please share holders and thus making media that appeals to the widest demographic possible. It trains people to expect all mainstream art to be instantly gratifying and that to be the norm.
@RialuCaos5 ай бұрын
@@braelhawke2189 The decay of this world always traces back to the stock market.
@AbisexualCarpenter5 ай бұрын
I would ask what is a “serious book” supposed to be
@mememachine-3865 ай бұрын
We are definitely post-information age now. Idk what I'd call it, but this era is something different for sure.
@DomWrath5 ай бұрын
As an oversimplification, I find broad, bland relatability unfulfilling versus characters that I can relate to in a specific and empathic way fulfilling, especially if I disagree with their actions. Naked by mike leigh is an example, the main character is abhorrent and does terrible things that make his more relatable side chilling. Alternatively, Kinds of kindness did a good job of having no relatable characters but the feeling of being emotionally manipulated and trapped by expectation or uncertainty is universal. I also think the rejection of critical appreciation of challenging films we're running into is because of the amount of stress we're collectively under at the moment. People are stressed enough on their day to day and prefer escapism to something that might upset them or not give them the catharsis they're seeking in their free time. I can respect that. I just hope they find the energy sometime to try something new and then have a conversation about it. It's a universally good thing to do.
@AbisexualCarpenter5 ай бұрын
I think since costs have increased audiences tend to prefer something they have a higher chance of enjoying. Also studios insist on huge budgets and therefore are afraid of risks
@stackels975 ай бұрын
That's so true from the opposite perspective as well. The cinema is so expensive that I have no interest in spending that much to not be challenged or taken out of my reality. Also the complete lack of cinema decorum is a huge turn off these days.
@ChinaMo3 ай бұрын
Ever since I found your channel years ago via the video about Kant, I have absolutely loved how you articulate so many things I honestly thought/felt in some way or another, but couldn't find the words to describe myself. The intuitive stuff can often be the hardest to comprehend in oneself and to articulate to others. Literally every time I see one of your videos, I feel like I learn something I didn't consider, or am able to find myself in the way you describe and consider so many concepts and views in the matter of your videos. Thank you for continuing to be excellent, thought provoking, and willing to tap into a lot of what people seem to not as commonly talk about, in its complexity rather than just simplicity/relatability.
@paulwheeler66095 ай бұрын
Honestly, more and more people are simply unable or unwilling to allow art of any kind to effect them. That takes a certain openness and vulnerability. Most prefer to be closed and invulnerable. It's easier that way.
@danhunt20485 ай бұрын
I've always enjoyed going to the movie theater, but I feel like I enjoy it more now because I'm in a dark room where I usually try to turn my phone off and not get distracted.
@jonwesick28445 ай бұрын
Maybe I'm just getting older but I don't enjoy movies like I used to. They've become a chore to sit through. I'm not sure why.
@andreasboe45095 ай бұрын
Entertainment overload and a lack of hope for the future. The medicine against it is to engage in physical and social activities.
@johnpeterson29875 ай бұрын
Same here but I don't see it as a loss. Nothing lasts forever. But the good movies can be rewatched, like rereading a good book.
@Desmond91005 ай бұрын
@@johnpeterson2987 Every single new movie? Of every genre and language?
@Ray035955 ай бұрын
Every movie seems to need to hit the 2.5 hour mark, and rarely does the runtime ever feel justified.
@wulfgarpl5 ай бұрын
Test it. Test if this is you or modern Hollywood cinema. Watch something from 60's. Or from different country. Father Goose was breakthrough from me. I would never thought I would watch romantic comedy with such interest. Rear Window made me feel cozy. Midnight Runners from Korea reminded me how I liked simple adventure movies with sprinkle of humor and action.
@jadonk-r44145 ай бұрын
I didn’t realize that 2001 wasn’t actually my favorite film. I wish someone told me that before I bought a bunch of shirts, painted the logo on my wall, and spent countless hours watching and rewatching it. I guess my favorite movie really is every marvel movie. Thanks for setting me straight
@Soldfor62cents4 ай бұрын
The main thing that makes Star Wars: A New Hope my favorite movie is that it's simultaneously a highly intellectual movie (it's beautifully shot and has an amazing script) and a comfort film since every scene is even in the slightest entertaining.
@МарияСбоева-и1ы16 күн бұрын
When I was younger, I found that "background TV" noise strange. My mother always turned something on screen while resting or doing chores. I've turned TV countless times when she falled asleep. And it was even rather creepy for me then, but now I'm starting to understand. When you're coming back home after 10-11 hour work day, when you are crippled with depression and anxiety, about what conscious watching you can talk about? And I do love cinema, but now it's talking me hours to prepare and watch something serious and engaging, if ever talking place. Eh.
@MyName-rx4jd5 ай бұрын
I think more and more people have truly lost the ability to objectively analyze media based on its merits and rather go with their emotional reaction on weather it is 'good' or 'bad' when in reality they are just commenting on weather or not the movie as 'for them' or not. There are plenty of media I personally like and will defend form undo criticism while being able to concede where it might have failed as a project over all. There are also plenty of films that I don't like but am able to separate myself from my personal reaction in order to praise it while being able to articulate what I did not like about it. Many people these days rather then having a civil discussion will just say 'it's not that deep' or 'you don't get it' when faced with Good Faith criticism which greatly saddens me because for me it's speaks to a shallow engagement with the work as a whole.
@stackels975 ай бұрын
This
@quintessenceSL5 ай бұрын
I think a missing part in this is sheer exhaustion. Things I want to engage with, but it will require full concentration, which I don't have the energy to do (cue the number of hours worked compared to previous generations). The effect is rather much sleepwalking, where only surface level understanding or overt themes makes it past the haze. Hence critiques will only be impressions at best. Generation Sleep.
@PauLtus_B5 ай бұрын
Trying to find objective quality in art is missing the point of art. I think that can also create a culture where pretty rubbish movies get praise for being important and incredibly well crafted movies gets dismissed as "dumb fun". Just don't dismiss everything that's not up your alley as too pretentious really believe that they enjoy the things they enjoy.
@MyName-rx4jd5 ай бұрын
@@PauLtus_B I disagree that there is no way to objectively analyze a work. I can disagree with a theme or message of a work while still being able to comment on how that theme was conveyed or explored and weather or not structural elements of the story helped or hindered how it conveyed certain elements, regardless of if it spoke to me on a personal level. I also firmly believe that people can enjoy what they want I just think they ought to be able to explain why (which can be 'trivial' or personal and that's ok!), without encouraging them to turn their brains off for the sake of just being entertained. (as an aside I think alot of that reaction can come from trying to explain to people who don't understand or don't want to understand our perspective which can be extremely frustrating but I think we do ourselves a massive disservice to give up on the project of analysis and self-refection as a whole.)
@PauLtus_B5 ай бұрын
@@MyName-rx4jd "I can disagree with a theme or message of a work while still being able to comment on how that theme was conveyed or explored and weather or not structural elements of the story helped or hindered how it conveyed certain elements, regardless of if it spoke to me on a personal level." But whether it was an effective method to convey this theme will also be subjective. It can also be subjective what the theme even is. I also really hate the absolutely incurious attitude about art and I love analyzing art. I really loathe the people who just respond to good analysis with "who cares as long as it made me feel thing" but then don't realise that all that analysis explains "why thing was felt". But when making claims of objectivity I think we end up forgetting why we interact with art in the first place. Our feelings about a piece of art is what gives it value, to try to find value beyond that kinda misses the point. If a piece of art is "objectively good" but no one gets anything out of it, then how can it be considered a good piece of art. "as an aside I think alot of that reaction can come from trying to explain to people who don't understand or don't want to understand our perspective which can be extremely frustrating but I think we do ourselves a massive disservice to give up on the project of analysis and self-refection as a whole.)" Not willing to understand is what I think is the one true problem here. It's either people who think that thinking through a piece of art is going to ruin the experience, or people who just want to prove that their opinion is objectively right (mostly people upset about a follow up to the blockbuster that has been their favorite since they were 12) claiming absolute knowledge about how movies should make and making really bad arguments. I really like seeing other people's perspectives and I have seen good readings on movies that completely contradict each other but I still thought both were well argued and interesting.
@Lazlo1175 ай бұрын
This video reminds me of “Why is Fast & Furious so Popular in China” from Accented Cinema. But a less bleak lol
@hannnnahhahhahha5 ай бұрын
Part of me thinks that there is so much to be stressed about lately that people are just looking for an escape. One where they don’t have to think too much or feel too much.
@Seasonal-Shadow_46744 ай бұрын
@hannnnahhahhahha the problem is they want every single pience of entertainment to revolve around them and need to be spoonfed, they dont get that other people exist too and want an escape, and want different things in entertainment in order to better consistently escape people mock others for wanting villains that are pure evil, unforgivable, irredeemable saying those villains are boring, lack depth, childish, cartoonish, one-note, soulless, only for kids; they have very infantalizing and condescending attitudes
@angelsunemtoledocabllero58012 ай бұрын
But if everything is an escape soon there will not be a place where you can hide. Also escaping you are not going to fix the broken things that made you escape in the first place.
@odrhann5 ай бұрын
42 minute ad for Mubi. You got me good. Bravo.
@david.ran.ren105 ай бұрын
Used to challenge the unknown; now self soothing in an echo chamber that puts down those who think otherwise
@Mallen1515 ай бұрын
For what it’s worth, I think that those Tik Toks make a valid point. Movies like “Toy Story” as mentioned in one of those Tik Toks legitimately mean a lot to a ton of people. Yet, some people do seem to be embarrassed to admit it because it’s an animated film that’s under the Disney umbrella. Yet, that film and so many other “conventional pop corn” flicks reached people for a reason. Why be embarrassed to admit that it reached you too? At the same time, a lot of people are embarrassed to admit if their favorite movie is, let’s say an experimental French movie from the 60’s for different reasons. They worry about seeming “different” or like an “outcast” if they admit to like movies that are against the grain. When people are asked, “What is your favorite movie?” at an indie film festival, they might feel compelled to say something that will help fit into that crowd. When asked the same question in a more informal setting, you might feel compelled to Give a more “informal” answer. What our actual “favorite movies” are though almost never fits into easy boxes like that in my opinion.
@lavabeard59395 ай бұрын
it doesn't matter where I am or who I'm talking to: my favorite movie is blade runner 2049. maybe that's because it was a somewhat successful blockbuster, and is also a very slow and difficult watch.
@chebbou695 ай бұрын
@@lavabeard5939 Blade Runner 2049 was an "artistic" success but it flopped at the box office. Modern audiences do not enjoy "slow" movies unfortunately...
@lavabeard59395 ай бұрын
@@chebbou69 yeah it wasnt a huge success (I dont think it lost money though, maybe it did), but it was still a big movie. so I can get away with saying its my favorite without people looking at me sideways lol
@LuisAngel-mu4zv5 ай бұрын
I think the point is, that they assume you're lying when you mention something "not popular". Why cant they just accept that you may genuinely like the films you claim to like? It's like people are very intimidated by others and wanna create trends to make themselves feel better when nobody is actually harming them.
@critiqueofthegothgf5 ай бұрын
Toy Story is one of the most socially acceptable "favorite movies as a kid" answer anyone could give. it's this pretending to be disadvantaged shtick that drives me mad. you've made up a person. no one is making fun of you for having liked Toy Story as a child, or even now. Toy Story 4 grossed 1 billion worldwide. the majority of those viewers were adults or adults with children.
@anuragpariharhackthemind5 ай бұрын
My favourite movies includes 12 Angry Men, Rashomon, Inception, Memento, X-Men Days of the future Past the Entire Mummy series and I think there is no bar of likeness because all these movies just blew my mind and moved me emotionally, whatever moves me emotionally I love it.
@alokinrainborn5 ай бұрын
Why can people just simply embrace that you can like, even love, the Marvel movies AND The Citizen Kane?? My patron saint, Roger Ebert, would agree with me.
@fruity_delirium5 ай бұрын
'Algorithmically cater to your comfort.' That hit home so hard. I realize that I can always research my way into finding interesting things, but in a world where you're always tired the algorithm can do it for you without you needing to expend the brain power for this task. Before you know it, you're in a loop of things that are comfortable and easy. Those aren't bad things in of themselves, but the loss of curiosity, to explore cinema (or other media) is suddenly just... Gone. Thank you for this essay, for pointing out the thing I've always wondered why easy was so marketable but once you try to watch something interesting, challenging, anything curious - it's so easily put down (limited theatrical run, immediately inaccessible, or even called out by others and get labeled pretentious). I know this video essay wasn't meant to be some big, bombastic effort for a wake up call; yet I am happy for the fact that you did materialize something I've been thinking about for awhile.
@kacperkowalski7215 ай бұрын
Thank you, that was really an inspiring and thought-provoking essay. I will keep it in mind during an upcoming film festival in my city.
@alexandredesouza36925 ай бұрын
33:25 In defense of using cinema as comfort, sometimes it is nice to watch an unchallenging sitcom to relax to with a loved one. There is still artistic and emotional merit to making something refreshing. Episodic comedies have been largely replaced with serialized shows to be binge watched and examined. Sometimes having a problem be resolved in 15 or 30 minutes is good enough.
@devononair3 ай бұрын
Absolutely. It is possible to both immerse yourself in movies and enjoy comfort entertainment. I frequently put Friends or Blackadder on while I'm doing something else, or maybe when I'm exhausted from work and don't want to think for a while. I even have comfort movies, and am particularly fond of disaster movies like 2012 for this purpose. Once I'm recharged or my chores are done, I settle down with a warm drink and watch an immersive and epic film. Different art has different objectives. I'm reminded of being a teenager into club-oriented dance music and people would say it was rubbish because "you can't listen to it outside of a club," to which I replied, "you're missing the point. That's exactly what it's for, and people enjoy dancing to it, or maybe listen to it in the gym or while driving, and therefore it is working as intended and therefore good." You can't compare it to an introspective prog metal album that you listen to at home when you're high. They have very different objectives!
@SamDavies945 ай бұрын
This is a beautifully crafted video. As someone who loves film and cinema, I struggle to understand the amount of people who are against the exploration of a medium. There are plenty of great films being made year on year, look at the festival circuit, cannes, sxsw, Toronto etc. The medium is still being developed and elaborated on. Recent works include, Titane, Poor Things, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Anatomy of a Murder, The Zone of Interest, The Square etc. I do feel there's a distinct 'style' of some independent films, ones that throws scenes and ideas at the audience but with no clear narrative throughline, they can be quite irritating, focus on the relatability, rather than the story being told. The modern audience is one that can gain any film or tv show across instantly accessible streaming services. As such, they conflate good cinema with 'entertainment', many see film and tv as the same - a means to be entertained, rather than explored and engaged with. You also touch on this, but it disappoints me that people will react negatively to a film if they disagree with central themes. I love all cinema, but delving backwards into the history of the art form is such a great experience. Seeing how the medium was moulded and used, what it can amount to, become. My favourite film is Stalker. My first Tarkovsky film, so rich in scope, philosophy, cinematography, narrative and imagination. A film which most modern viewers will ignore or lable as 'slow' (never mind a Tsai Ming Liang or Weerastakul film). It's disappointing that people only watch 'safe' or 'relatable' films as you mention. Great video! If you're interested in films and want to explore them, may I recommend: Last Year in Marienbad Stalker Mirror L'Avventura Red Desert Eros+Massacre Man with a Movie Camera The Passion of Joan of Arc Titane Paris Texas Mad God The Killing of a Sacred Deer 8 1/2 Solaris Vivre Sa Vie The Turin Horse Uncle Boonmee A Touch of Zen The Human Condition Dekalog The Cremator
@jameszeller77695 ай бұрын
Great essay. I thought the point about the "commodification" of "relatability" and the way this leads to "blank slate" characters was excellent. I do value films that challenge the viewer and capture life's complexity, but I am also a bit skeptical of thinking about discomfort as the ideal that brings "true nourishment." My thoughts is that narrative art is typically aimed at capturing the human experience by imitating life, and when this is the aim, we encounter a paradox: characters and their stories feel more universal BECAUSE they are so particular. This does not always make for uncomfortable, challenging, or un-relatable art, but it does make for something much more rich and nourishing than the commodification of relatability.
@e7l-y9i5 ай бұрын
04:10 Biiig misunderstanding. You don't want politicians who "only" do hard job. They could work hard - but AGAINST you!!! Not understanding such an important thing by author of this video makes watching the rest of it useless thus saving time of my life.
@stackels975 ай бұрын
Relatability being so much easier to digest for those who don't want to have to think, was such a great point. That's put into words one of the major reasons media has become so dissapointing to me over the last 5 or 6 years. Films and TV were my solace when I was growing up. Escaping from my life and experiencing heightened or different realities, broadened my tiny world and expanded my own creativity. I miss that so much. Dialogue all seems to sound the same now, it all sounds like social media, so there's no opportunity to suspend any disbelief. There's no real worldbuilding because everything feels like the real world or some high school level attempt at post modernism or social commentary. My favourite movies are the ones that either tell small stories in creative ways or the ones that tackle bigger issues in a microcosm. 28 days and Stranger than Fiction are my top 2. Ps. Most of the good faith anti woke commentary I've seen from reviewers on youtube comes from people who arent biggots or conservatives (though they're frequently lumped in with those who are, for some reason) and I think it's disingenuous to call them that. Most simply feel that forced messaging and diversity has lead to some terrible storytelling in many franchisees, which I don't think anyone can genuinely deny.
@Aspirider02205 ай бұрын
Far too often the "good faith" anti-woke people are the ones who say they like Sarah Connor and Ellen Ripley to deflect criticism.
@Sidharthavicious5 ай бұрын
I like that one of the Fight Club scenes you used was Bob's pants falling down.
@hugodbs5 ай бұрын
His name is Robert Paulson
@bengoodwin29885 ай бұрын
His name is Robert Paulson.
@ENigma-um8zw5 ай бұрын
Bob Paulson?! Good guy, had bitch tits. Wish he was still around!
@yeahbuddy72175 ай бұрын
His name is Robert Paulson
@glasshoppernarration51655 ай бұрын
His name is Pobert Raulson
@thapelomosiuoa29135 ай бұрын
The argument here is less than the sum of it's parts. I agree with Part 3 wholeheartedly but not with the idea that selling relatability is a new thing or that it's bad. Did we forget that the 90s and 2000s were the height of the romcom genre when 10-20 of them would come out every year with the same basic structure baked into some half-cocked conciet about falling in love with your best friend, your housekeeper, or the girl next door. Also, isn't the cinematic equivalent of empty calories what dominated the cineplex during that same time? Finally, films have also always been about moral righteousness, see: Dr. Strangelove or A Clockwork Orange or any of the 40+ movies about the Vietnam War.
@adolfodominguez18575 ай бұрын
And he forgets that Hollywood has always been an industry that makes what makes money. It's always been that way since Hollywood was born. I mean, the wizard of Oz isn't an ambiguous tale of the complexiiof the human being
@thapelomosiuoa29135 ай бұрын
@@adolfodominguez1857 absolutely! Challenging cinematic masterpieces like The Santa Clause, The Flintstones and Dumb and Dumber were among the highest grossing movies of 1994
@neutral_narr5 ай бұрын
@adolfodominguez1857 he didn't say films are a business, but rather, there has been a change in how we consume media in a way that has harmed our ability to perceive and discuss the artform.
@LadyAstarionAncunin5 ай бұрын
The cinematic experience that many people yearn for as though it's gone is still here: in video games. There's a reason why that industry makes more than film and music combined, and it's not just the price of games, not just Candy Crush and Minecraft, but because you can get deep, personal stories that you get fully immersed in on such a level that if feels like it's happening to you or to someone you love. And film can do that to a certain extent (I am a cinephile, after all), but video games go so much deeper. And those video games that give you that depth are huge successes. Commercial. And the indie (so, arthouse equivalent) have their ardent audiences too. People love them both. So, I don't really like when people assume that general audiences don't want that.
@Christoforos19484 ай бұрын
This is hands down my favorite channel on KZbin
@JoeyEsqueda5 ай бұрын
I've been rediscovering classics and forcing myself to watch mostly fringe cinema, forgotten high concept works, weird stuff, and I can't help but need or crave a big mac every now and then, but commercial movies do frustrate me a lot as well.
@nope56575 ай бұрын
Big Macs are good. And filling.
@navienslavement5 ай бұрын
@@nope5657bad for your health long-term
@juancampos11645 ай бұрын
Well critique, basically it reflects the current times of; unimaginative, uninspired, uninventive. It’s not one side or the other, but both
@AsiaJohnson-lr7ub5 ай бұрын
Last movie that really blew me away was Top Gun: Maverick. Rewatched it for 4th of July. It feels like the kind of movies my Dad used to show me that he grew up with. It's just good clean fun and it makes you feel incredible.
@Desmond91005 ай бұрын
60 years from now a 40 year old man will say his favorite movie is the classic Top Gun: Maverick. His 19 year old son rolls his eyes, too bad his dad´s taste in movies is so dry, boring and pretentious.
@Ex0t1cButt_ers5 ай бұрын
@@Desmond9100 why do you have to be so unnecessarily negative?
@jesustovar25495 ай бұрын
To me it kinda felt like that with Inside Out 2, I hadn't seen a Pixar movie in theaters since Toy Story 4 in 2019, but this new sequel (which I wasn't expecting) blew me away, I would even say I liked it more than the first one (which was good), this one felt more mature, I found reflecting about myself (am I a good person?) and also laughing, it's the happiest I felt in a long time, during and after the movie ended. It was also a great communal experience, theater packed, lots of kids, parents and grandparents, my Mom hadn't seen long rows to see a movie since the 80s, we loved it.
@jesustovar25495 ай бұрын
@@Desmond9100Top Gun isn't even pretentious, it's american propaganda at best, but I could see the appeal at the time, my Mom saw it at the time, my Uncle was in the navy, many army men in my family, it was like "feeling at home" seeing all those white uniforms, I also like those scenes where the boys are singing, I imagine that's what my Uncle did with his navy friends during his youth.
@Desmond91005 ай бұрын
@@Ex0t1cButt_ers Its not my opinion of the movie, its the hypothetical 19 year old son's opinion
@seansmith62555 ай бұрын
1:03 No it's not But two seconds ago you were judging people for liking challenging movies Again you don't have to like that But you can't get mad at people judging you when you judge others
@sathyak78145 ай бұрын
In actuality, these feelings of the good old days have always been there. Every newer generation looks back and envies the past glories. No Country does a great job telling this. But still the current tripe being put out is simply something that will never be like the old days but will be looked upon on in nostalgia in the coming years. I also think the current problems in the world have accentuated. Everyday new problems arise and people just can't cope with this. They just ignore it but subconsciously it deeply affects most people. I believe that it is this subconscious pain that causes both movie and tv creators and viewers to tend to watch a more non-chalant view on the world rather than focusing on blunt, hard truth which some of the old classics provide. The people who love these oldies are those who want to understand that pain, embrace it and recuperate.
@mikeciul85995 ай бұрын
I remember my grandmother doing "background watching" way back in the 80s. She would leave the TV on while she was doing other things in the house. It drove me crazy! The thing about TV is, there are a _lot_ of ads. I find ads to be highly disrupting to my well-being, so I use an ad blocker and I watch videos on Nebula when I can (I watched this on Nebula!) And I make a point of trying to focus on one thing at a time. There is something to said for the limited choice of TV. I remember a number of movies that I really enjoyed, but I only watched the because they were on TV. The downside was that I usually missed the beginning. Having said that, even the experience of scrolling for something to watch isn't new. I remember going to the video store and being totally paralyzed by the choices. Although I appreciated this video, it was weird to watch this on Nebula because I could tell there was a Mubi ad in there somewhere...
@mickeyhage5 ай бұрын
"Something that late-stage capitalism does very well is incorporate critiques into itself." Disco Elysium moment.
@jasonkatz44305 ай бұрын
Except hasn’t it been late stage capitalism for the last hundred years?
@spejic15 ай бұрын
@@jasonkatz4430 "Late state capitalism" doesn't mean the state of capitalism near the end of its existence, like (say) Marx predicted. It means the modern unmockable, unsatirizable form of capitalism that has perfected itself. It will always be late stage capitalism. Forever.
@josecarlosmoreno97315 ай бұрын
@@jasonkatz4430 Most of the people who use that phrase haven't even read the books it's from or understand the concept. Hell, the vast majority of people who criticize capitalism don't understand what capitalism is (because to do so they would have to turn against the parts of capitalism they like, being among the more privileged sections of the imperial core). However, the end of capitalism is currently a possibility, but the next stage won't be socialism/communism, it'll be a new economic form that has yet to be understood or studied but is apparent in its current creation. It'll be some type of industrial manorialism and feudalism politically, where firms take on the role of political units like counties, duchies, and kingdoms used to, being simply administrative partitions that became independent after the fall of Western Rome. Whereas before land was the main resource to be inherited and taxed, in the future it will include industries, natural resources, and possibly even segments of the labor pool. The main political actors then will once again be the richest families (rather than states and political parties). The ignorant might still call it capitalism for a long time, but if markets, wage labor and profits are no longer the main economic drivers because all markets have been monopolized, wage labor is secondary to welfare, and profits are less important than market share, it's not actually capitalism anymore.
@unfgreen5 ай бұрын
@@spejic1 I like your definition better than this one in a recent article by Erika Rasure: "The term "late-stage capitalism" got its name from the idea that the current phase of capitalism is the final, often most exploitative and unsustainable, stage before a significant change or collapse."
@Lilliathi5 ай бұрын
@@unfgreen It's not a stage, it's simply corruption. Capitalism works because of competition, but when pseudo-monopolies start to form, the competition is over. With a little bit of regulation, as seen in Europe, it functions just fine.
@PresidentBrobama5 ай бұрын
That McCarthy quote hit hard. I wrote a 606 page book that gets great ratings by people who finish it, but not a lot of people finish it lol
@gokaysontas94054 ай бұрын
This video - probably (time might tell in the long-term) - was truly nourishing to me. It was challenging and resulted in self-reflection and the commitment to be better in regards to how to look on flims in general and how to classify the presented. Thank you.
@MaxToddUniverse5 ай бұрын
Attention span win! 42 minutes with no subway surfers screen! Seriously, thank you for interrupting the algorithmic scroll and thank you even more for writing this. I'm gonna be a cringe tiktok filmbro and say I'm an aspiring writer and a deep feeler and I've been so afraid of the stuff you mentioned in part 3 lately--I both really need to make art and also feel too inundated by art, if that makes sense. I've honestly considered whether it's even worth it to write because, arguably, there's too much art--or, at least, we're exposed to too much, as you say. It's really so sinister to me that what I'd argue is our greatest human strength, storytelling as a vehicle for empathy and education and remembrance and all that jazz, is being weaponized to actually keep us from feeling anything or learning anything or even, really, remembering anything by silencing that inner voice which art should ideally communing with in the first place. I guess that's what so many stories are about, though--you can travel to a magical place but you have to return lest you lose yourself. You put it into words better than I seriously ever could, so sincerely, thank you again for putting it out there, and for giving us all a bit of hope about. Keep doing what you do, it matters!
@KR-si3dx5 ай бұрын
I disagree with your assessment of reacting against wokeness. To take some low-hanging fruit examples, Disney’s Andor was *SCREAMINGLY* pro-Communist and leaned heavily into Lucas’ explicit intent to frame the Rebellion as the Viet-Cong analog and therefore as the good guys. It also - if not centered, then at least heavily featured - a lesbian relationship. People who hate The Acolyte also almost always love Andor. No one is afraid of challenging ideas from across the political aisle. What is being reacted against is the idea that transgression, representation, and subversion are intrinsically acceptable substitutes for telling a compelling story. “Wokeness” is lazy in a way that the “moralism” isn’t quite in that it takes *any* criticism as a sign that it is right and good. In Disney’s mind, if no one liked or watched The Acolyte it’s because it told a great transgressive story in the exact same way that Andor was a “failure,” and that’s not true at all.
@christijanrobert16275 ай бұрын
Interesting perspective on Andor. I have not yet seen it. I tend to stay clear of Star Wars. The trilogy that began with The Phantom Menace didn't quite capture me. However, in the future, should I view Andor, I will keep your assessment in mind. Pretty fascinating, especially as I am not exactly smitten with the scourge of Communism or the people without the foresight to research its death toll in this world, people who extol slogans with empty virtue. (They say Marx had Satanist leanings.)
@fhujf5 ай бұрын
He did address this earlier in the video by talking about the commodification of representation in films.
@MauAmzArr5 ай бұрын
Well, there's people who love McDonalds and BudLight, they are the kind of people who say that "nobody honestly loves international cuisine and people who love IPAs are lying". They cannot comprehend that there's tastes for everyone, depending on their background and experiences, their cultural origin, their education level, the amount or lack of traveling, and in general everything you have exposed yourself to. There is nothing wrong with grabbing a pack of fries now and then (knowing they are probably not the healthiest option), but thinking that consuming something more elaboratedly appealing is just for show-offs or pretentious people is short sighted. I watched 2001 at a very young age and LOVED IT, and that didn;t stop me from loving Grmlins or Back to the Future. Why would it be the other way around?
@cripplingclaustrophobia5 ай бұрын
Blade Runner is my favorite movie of all time.
@Novastar.SaberCombat5 ай бұрын
Do you mean BR2049 or the original? Personally, when I saw BR2049, I immediately knew that it was layered and designed WAY beyond what most movies were all about. I even recognized that it would be "boring" and "drawn out" to the masses. But holy sheet was it a bloody FANTASTIC production in nearly every regard. The costuming, lighting, music, specific performances (BAUTISTA WAS AWESOME!!!), the color palettes, the direction, the thematic underpinnings... all of it.
@lavabeard59395 ай бұрын
@@Novastar.SaberCombat yeah I went to see BR2049 with friends (in their 50s, who loved the original) and when the credits rolled one of them audibly said "what the f?" we talked in the car and they said they didn't get it. I dont think they ever rewatched it.
@DanLyndon5 ай бұрын
A mediocre film as far as writing and acting, but atmospherically it's hard to replicate.
@Portents-Magic-imagination5 ай бұрын
@@DanLyndona pun on replicant! 😂
@josephglatz255 ай бұрын
I absolutely adore the original, but as for 2049, I think it's probably the most lifeless and sterile movies I've ever watched. All the flat, empty sets, monochromatic lighting, lifeless performances, and empty sound design. I don't understand what people see in it. Its world fails to live and breathe the way the original did. It's why I haven't bothered with anything else Dennis Villeneuve has put out.
@clancyjames5852 ай бұрын
This video is one of your masterpieces. And it really spoke to me - also about my own watching habits. I've been considering that perhaps we're slipping towards those dystopian masterpieces - somewhere between the Feelies of Brave New World, but maybe we're closer to the orgies of hate from 1984 - where we get either comfort, or self-righteousness justification.
@arnarogbjorn5 ай бұрын
An amazing introspection on how "politics/woke/literally me" rhetoric is inbuilt into movies. Best movie channel on youtube about how movies move people and why.