"The Classic American Date: go see a movie together. Our culture is so film-saturated that this invitation is the easiest and most natural one to make" (Grant Horner, Meaning at the Movies: Becoming a Discerning Viewer, 145).
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Ain't that the truth. My wife and I went on our "first date" on December 12, 2004--we watched Ocean's Twelve.
"Let us cross over the river and rest under the shade of the trees." - T.J. "Stonewall" Jackson
Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Hollywood and Movies: "Self-Portraits . . . Strangest Form of Art"
"This [Sunset Boulevard] is one of the darkest films ever produced in Hollywood, undoubtedly because Hollywood is the subject, and Hollywood is people. Self-portraits are always the strangest form of art. They always tell the truth even while they lie. The title of the film comes from the famous street winding through the northern Los Angeles hills and down to the Pacific Ocean. The road is curvy, hilly, and very heavily used--in other words, it is dangerous. . . . This story about the film industry and what it can do to the human soul is absolutely blistering, even six decades after its release. It deals with the arts of screenwriting, directing, and acting; shows the costs and temptations of becoming famous and rich; delineates the manipulation by others and self so endemic to the artistic and business world that is Hollywood; brutally snickers at Hollywood wackiness; and calculates the cost of selling the soul for an image. Fame is shown for what it really is: the temporary acclamation of people who eventually turn on you and then laugh at you, pity you--or both. The message is simple: Hollywood kills" (Grant Horner, Meaning at the Movies: Becoming a Discerning Viewer, 184-185).
Labels:
Grant Horner,
Hollywood,
Movie,
The Bookshelf
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Movie
My wife and I watched Lars and the Real Girl this week. The movie is about human emotions, relationships; the take away message for the movie is (sacrificial) love. There were a couple lines of dialogue that were stellar, the best being:
Lars Lindstrom (main character): I was hoping winter was over.
Margo (Lars' coworker): No, it's just a thaw - winter isn't over till Easter.
Lars Lindstrom (main character): I was hoping winter was over.
Margo (Lars' coworker): No, it's just a thaw - winter isn't over till Easter.
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