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Invelos Forums->General: General Discussion |
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Registered: May 8, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,945 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting TheMadMartian: Quote: Quoting DarklyNoon:
Quote: I strongly disagree, we do not need any boundaries, I believe in the free will and spirit of man. I respond very bad to any kind of authority, regulation, restrictions of any kind. Who is that who wants to tell me what to do and what is ethnical or of moral values ?
You ? The State ? The President ? The guy around the corner ? The non existing god ? Surely not! So rape, murder, thieft, assault, etc., all fine in your book?
I do not believe in governments, I surely do not believe in any religion.
Quote: Freedom is the most valuable thing a human being has. Actually, the capacity for rational thought is the most valuable thing a human being has. Without that, we are no better than the gorilla living, with his freedom, in the forest.
Quote: Freedom in actions and Freedom of Speech and Freedom of thought. It always strikes me as funny that the people who actually live by this code rarely, if ever, allow others the same freedom. Well, well, well, and those things like rape , murder , theft are not occuring in your so called forms of a state ? America is not stealing oil from the Iraq people.? They did not just kill ten thousandas of innocent people there, just for the frelling oil ? Your democracy works very well as I can see. And what about those bankers that just nearly kiled the worlds economy ? I have to say, the democracy worked there pretty well too. And even more funny, the bankers are about to do it again! Right under the eyes of the democracy. And what about the many innocent people killed by death penalty in various countries. I am sure their families also think that the various forms of governments did their work pretty well too. I could continue for days here. The only true form of society is Anarchy, no gods no masters, people are all the same , no one is allowed to command anyone else. Of course this only works if people understand what is the only thing left they have, and that is their freedom and hopefully their kindness to respect every other human being, no matter what color, what race, what country they are. But as the world is corrupted to its core, we will slowly move to our demise and I cannot even be sad about this. I think the human race, as it has become does not deserve anything better. cheers Donnie | | | www.tvmaze.com | | | Last edited: by DarklyNoon |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,635 |
| Posted: | | | | Please stay with me for a while; I intend to wander around for a bit, but I might make a worthwhile point now and then.
My politics is far closer to Jane Fonda's than John Wayne's. But as a film critic, I try to avoid letting my personal feelings affect my realization and evaluation of performance. Wayne many terrible films, just as anyone who made 150 films over 4-5 decades. If you cannot recognize and separate performance (acting ability) from scripted characters and situations, you have no business commenting on acting ability. If you hate Jane Fonda's politics, and you cannot set your attitude aside, you will never see the amazing performance she gives in Klute or other films. If you hate John Ford westerns, and cannot set aside that attitude, you will never appreciate a John Wayne performance.
For those of you who think some sort of censorship caused pre-1970's films to be less than those after, and that literature was never censored: learn something! There was no code against anything in films prior to 1934. And if you think you could own a copy of Lady Chatterley's Lover or Brave New World (in Ireland), Ulysses (James Joyce), Tropic of Cancer, Howl, Fanny Hill, The Diary of Anne Frank (in Lebanon), Candide, Animal Farm, forget it! ... These and many others have been banned by governments throughout the world.
As for technical innovations... phooey. All filmmaking is a tool for storytelling. When Birth of a Nation was made, the story was an offensive racist evil thing... still is. But the technical innovations DW Griffith used were far more amazing than any film made since. I choose to respect technical innovation, but love the art of telling a good story with interesting characters well. If you are so 21st century that you cannot sit through an older film and enjoy it, it is your loss, and your lack of patience affects the reputation of great films in no way. Your world view is stifled by the blinders you choose to wear. I choose to be open and learn about eras which preceeded my own life. I have never known a day in my life which occurred before the dropping of two atomic bombs on civilians, yet I hope to understand the days, the weeks, the months, the years, the centuries, the millenia which preceeded that set of acts. Without that knowledge today is baffling.
The reason I own so many DVDs from the past ten years is because I find going to a theater painful. I've written at length about seat kickers, cell phones, standing and blocking my view during closing credits, talking, and all the other things which makes theater-going so miserable. When I can buy a DVD for less than two tickets (not including popcorn), why should I bother going?
If you like comic book films, films where the CGI overwhelms a horrendous script, fine. But you are avoiding the fine literature, the fine art of filmmaking. You have chosen to watch comic books rather than novels (and no, graphic novels do not count). I taught a college course on comic books for nearly two years, three units, at California State University, Sacramento. I love comic books and know their importance. But Captain America is not Huckleberry Finn (and Huck Finn is not The Inferno, despite the similarity in structure).
If you choose to remain ignorant in the history of film, do not engage in discussing it. You ought to close your mouth and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. | | | If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.
Cliff | | | Last edited: by VibroCount |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 6,635 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting VibroCount: Quote: If you choose to remain ignorant in the history of film, do not engage in discussing it. You ought to close your mouth and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. Well said, Cliff. (and everything that went before it) | | | Hal |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,494 |
| Posted: | | | | ..and she ate dogpoo really.. | | | In the 60's, People took Acid to make the world Weird. Now the World is weird and People take Prozac to make it Normal.
Terry |
| Registered: March 20, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 2,851 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting TheMadMartian: Quote: There is a huge difference between being entertained by flights of fancy, which movies are, and being entertained by watching others actually suffer. I own the Saw films and knew, going in, that nobody was actually suffering. I don't think there is all that much difference, but I'm not planning on censoring your entertainment, so have no fear. --------------- |
| Registered: March 10, 2009 | Posts: 2,248 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting VibroCount: Quote: Please stay with me for a while; I intend to wander around for a bit, but I might make a worthwhile point now and then.
My politics is far closer to Jane Fonda's than John Wayne's. But as a film critic, I try to avoid letting my personal feelings affect my realization and evaluation of performance. Wayne many terrible films, just as anyone who made 150 films over 4-5 decades. If you cannot recognize and separate performance (acting ability) from scripted characters and situations, you have no business commenting on acting ability. If you hate Jane Fonda's politics, and you cannot set your attitude aside, you will never see the amazing performance she gives in Klute or other films. If you hate John Ford westerns, and cannot set aside that attitude, you will never appreciate a John Wayne performance.
For those of you who think some sort of censorship caused pre-1970's films to be less than those after, and that literature was never censored: learn something! There was no code against anything in films prior to 1934. And if you think you could own a copy of Lady Chatterley's Lover or Brave New World (in Ireland), Ulysses (James Joyce), Tropic of Cancer, Howl, Fanny Hill, The Diary of Anne Frank (in Lebanon), Candide, Animal Farm, forget it! ... These and many others have been banned by governments throughout the world.
As for technical innovations... phooey. All filmmaking is a tool for storytelling. When Birth of a Nation was made, the story was an offensive racist evil thing... still is. But the technical innovations DW Griffith used were far more amazing than any film made since. I choose to respect technical innovation, but love the art of telling a good story with interesting characters well. If you are so 21st century that you cannot sit through an older film and enjoy it, it is your loss, and your lack of patience affects the reputation of great films in no way. Your world view is stifled by the blinders you choose to wear. I choose to be open and learn about eras which preceeded my own life. I have never known a day in my life which occurred before the dropping of two atomic bombs on civilians, yet I hope to understand the days, the weeks, the months, the years, the centuries, the millenia which preceeded that set of acts. Without that knowledge today is baffling.
The reason I own so many DVDs from the past ten years is because I find going to a theater painful. I've written at length about seat kickers, cell phones, standing and blocking my view during closing credits, talking, and all the other things which makes theater-going so miserable. When I can buy a DVD for less than two tickets (not including popcorn), why should I bother going?
If you like comic book films, films where the CGI overwhelms a horrendous script, fine. But you are avoiding the fine literature, the fine art of filmmaking. You have chosen to watch comic books rather than novels (and no, graphic novels do not count). I taught a college course on comic books for nearly two years, three units, at California State University, Sacramento. I love comic books and know their importance. But Captain America is not Huckleberry Finn (and Huck Finn is not The Inferno, despite the similarity in structure).
If you choose to remain ignorant in the history of film, do not engage in discussing it. You ought to close your mouth and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. Yeah totally ignorant like im currently rebuilding my dvd collection but i will have it online by the end of this year when i should have it back up to about 700. Question have you ever seen Badlands or 10 Rillington Place? | | | Last edited: by ShinyDiscGuy |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 6,635 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting DarklyNoon: Quote: Well, well, well,
and those things like rape , murder , theft are not occuring in your so called forms of a state ?
America is not stealing oil from the Iraq people.? They did not just kill ten thousandas of innocent people there, just for the frelling oil ? Your democracy works very well as I can see.
And what about those bankers that just nearly kiled the worlds economy ? I have to say, the democracy worked there pretty well too. And even more funny, the bankers are about to do it again! Right under the eyes of the democracy.
And what about the many innocent people killed by death penalty in various countries. I am sure their families also think that the various forms of governments did their work pretty well too.
I could continue for days here.
cheers Donnie It must be fascinating to live in such a fantasy land! | | | Hal |
| Registered: May 8, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,945 |
| Posted: | | | | So you think those events did not occur ? You must be kidding me hal9g.
I think we should stop this discussion right now then, cannot be bothered to discuss serious matters vs ignorancy.
cheers Donnie | | | www.tvmaze.com |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 6,635 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting DarklyNoon: Quote: So you think those events did not occur ? You must be kidding me hal9g.
I think we should stop this discussion right now then, cannot be bothered to discuss serious matters vs ignorancy.
cheers Donnie It is your version of them that is a fantasy. But, I agree, it is time to move on! | | | Hal |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,635 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting FilmAlba: Quote:
Yeah totally ignorant like im currently rebuilding my dvd collection but i will have it online by the end of this year when i should have it back up to about 700.
Question have you ever seen Badlands or 10 Rillington Place? I saw Badlands in Austin, Texas in 1973, and on TV a half dozen times since. I saw 10 Rillington Place once. Both are fine. Neither is a favorite of mine. I'm sorry, I have little fascination with serial killers or drawn out chase scenes. Sorry. What's your point? I suspect I've seen hundreds of times more films than you. I've probably made many more films than you. One of my film teachers was Robert Nelson, for whom I made the short film Firetruck. I doubt your experience exceeds mine, even if you manage to find a few dozen films you've seen that I have not. I've been a jurist at a few film festivals, and still correspond with a few filmmakers. Do we really need to compare our privates? I know you will respond to this with another challenge, as you have done every time I've failed to ignore you. For now on, I will attempt to resist, but your posts are sitting ducks. ---- Edited to mention that I added my 700th DVD in 2004. | | | If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.
Cliff | | | Last edited: by VibroCount |
| Registered: August 23, 2008 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,656 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting scotthm: Quote: Quoting Alien Redrum:
Quote: Quoting scotthm:
Quote: Quoting hal9g:
Quote: What social redeeming value do movies like SAW 1-6 offer the viewing public? Or films that depict nothing but foul language and gratuitous sex? Not to mention, what kind of entertainment value do such things hold? The movies being made tell you a whole lot about the people watching them, and most of it's not very good these days.
You're kidding, right?
You ever read the Bible? It has all sorts of violence in it, with an incest bonus.
I guess it says a whole lot about the people who read it. I guess you missed the highlighted part about entertainment value? Who do you know that reads the Bible for entertainment? Plenty of people. I have a friend, who's Jewish, who just recently started reading the Bible. He's not looking to convert, he's just reading it for no other reason that he's never read it and it's got some good stories in the mix. Why wouldn't someone read the Bible for entertainment purposes. Quote: IMO, there is something wrong with people who are "entertained" by watching others suffer, particularly in horrific ways. There certainly can be some value in reading about human attrocities, but I can't imagine being entertained by such things. You do realize that the people "suffering" are just actors, right? And it's make believe and not real, right? Have you even seen, say, any of the Saw films, or films similar to it? Or do you just like throwing down an insane blanket judgment on those who watch it? Because there are lessons to be learned in them. Every one knows that in a slasher film if you have sex or do drugs you are the first to die. | | | Reviewer, HorrorTalk.com
"I also refuse to document CLT results and I pay my bills to avoid going to court." - Sam, keeping it real, yo. |
| Registered: March 10, 2009 | Posts: 2,248 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting VibroCount: Quote: Quoting FilmAlba:
Quote:
Yeah totally ignorant like im currently rebuilding my dvd collection but i will have it online by the end of this year when i should have it back up to about 700.
Question have you ever seen Badlands or 10 Rillington Place?
I saw Badlands in Austin, Texas in 1973, and on TV a half dozen times since. I saw 10 Rillington Place once. Both are fine. Neither is a favorite of mine. I'm sorry, I have little fascination with serial killers or drawn out chase scenes. Sorry. What's your point? I suspect I've seen hundreds of times more films than you. I've probably made many more films than you. One of my film teachers was Robert Nelson, for whom I made the short film Firetruck. I doubt your experience exceeds mine, even if you manage to find a few dozen films you've seen that I have not. I've been a jurist at a few film festivals, and still correspond with a few filmmakers. Do we really need to compare our privates?
I know you will respond to this with another challenge, as you have done every time I've failed to ignore you. For now on, I will attempt to resist, but your posts are sitting ducks.
----
Edited to mention that I added my 700th DVD in 2004. Well i had the idea of converting my whole film collection to hidef so i regrettably sold off the majority of my DVD's. The release of hidef titles was and is still slow and pricey it was starting to get annoying given with DVD i had been used to watching like 400 to 500 films a year. Im 23 coming up for 24 and i estimate i have seen about 2000 odd films. |
| Registered: March 14, 2007 | Posts: 2,337 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting FilmAlba: Quote:
Im 23 coming up for 24 and i estimate i have seen about 2000 odd films. So you're a boy who have seen some films....and sound like one. |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 6,635 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Kulju: Quote: Quoting FilmAlba:
Quote:
Im 23 coming up for 24 and i estimate i have seen about 2000 odd films. So you're a boy who have seen some films....and sound like one. You give him way too much credit! | | | Hal |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,635 |
| Posted: | | | | Whether you love them or hate them, "best of" lists are certainly something we can all disagree on. But no movie-list maker (that we know of) has ever gone to the lengths of Brad Bourland, 58, of Austin, Texas. " The Best, Most Important and the Most Beloved English Language Films of the 20th Century" ranks an outlandish 9,331 films. He says it's not done yet, either. He deliberately stopped short, because he wants the public to help him make it an even 10,000. The project began back in 2001, when Bourland started with the reasonable goal of rating 200-300 films. ------- Wow! 9,331 films, all evaluated since 2001. Now that's watching a few films! | | | If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.
Cliff |
| Registered: March 20, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 2,851 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Alien Redrum: Quote: Quoting scotthm:
Quote: Who do you know that reads the Bible for entertainment?
Plenty of people. I have a friend, who's Jewish, who just recently started reading the Bible. He's not looking to convert, he's just reading it for no other reason that he's never read it and it's got some good stories in the mix. Technically speaking, I guess "one" could be considered "plenty". Quote: You do realize that the people "suffering" are just actors, right? And it's make believe and not real, right? Do tell.... Quote: Have you even seen, say, any of the Saw films, or films similar to it? No. I've read synopses of some (and similar films) and have concluded that I'm not interested, but I don't see any need for you to get offended that I don't share your fascination with the macabre. --------------- | | | Last edited: by scotthm |
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