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Default Re: What's the last movie you watched? 4th Edition
A brilliant work of art. Certainly one of the most ambitious movies ever made. It encompasses life, death, sex, loneliness, love, illness, family, parenthood, identity...it's a movie about everything (or about how everything is everything) and everyone (or how everyone is everyone). And because it's about everything (and everything) and everyone (and everyone) that means it has relevance to the way almost everyone (and everyone) moves through their life, even if they're just hurtling towards death. It's about how we're all basically the same, even if we're all basically different. If this sounds confusing to you it's because pondering the concept of identity can be confusing at first. Hell, it never becomes entirely clear. Well it's not just about you (it's about you because it's about everyone, see?) it's about how you (and everyone) interact with the people around you (i.e. Everyone Else). It's also about how "we" (i.e. Me, You, and Everyone Else) learn from our actions and interactions (and reactions) in order to shape our personalities and our trajectories through life. Or at least that's what we think we're doing. The acting is wonderful by the way. I guess it's worth mentioning. Even though "we" are all actors who play characters that our brain tells us we are, or who we're supposed to think we are based on how we deal with our actions, movements, decisions, etc. When Roger Ebert reviewed the film I was perturbed by the fact that he didn't review it in a traditional way; i.e. he didn't really discuss the acting, the directing, the set design, the lighting, the "plot". Now that I've seen the movie I realize that to discuss the movie in that way is pointless because that frame of mind is a macguffin established by the films nature (i.e. it's a film!), and by the end of it we have our thought process subverted so that we can properly understand it. Manohla Dargis gave a more traditional review, in a sense, but she delves into the grand ideas of the film just as sharply as Ebert does. Maybe the film is about a dream and Caden Cotard is the dreamer. But all films are dreams (nothing that happens in a movie is "real" so to ponder "was it only a dream?" when it comes to the plot of any movie is pointless) and all audience members (and writers, and directors, and actors, and painters, and garbage men, and talk show hosts, and scientists, and diet pill salesmen, etc.) are dreamers. Fiction and nonfiction blur in the film, and one man lives in two worlds, or just one world separated by a consciously established binary of "reality" and "fantasy". So it doesn't really matter who is who or what is what. You might not think that you'll "get" this movie or that it "applies to You" (whoever "You" are), and that's fine. Like any great movie or work of art it's "Not For Everyone". Only bad movies are "For Everyone(!)". So if you watch it (or don't), it will still be there. Just like "You", "Me", "Everyone", and "Everything".
Or instead you can go watch G.I. Joe this weekend. It's entirely up to "You".