Ok-Survey-9077
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_jde1yv0 wrote
Reply to comment by Joseph_Santos_Cruzz in I recently saw Blade Runner (1982) and really did not get the appeal. Why is this movie so iconic? by Joseph_Santos_Cruzz
And you’re perfectly entitled to feel that way about the movie, but when you look at all the facets you see positive about, it’s easy to see why it’s such an iconic film.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_jde0m0h wrote
Reply to I recently saw Blade Runner (1982) and really did not get the appeal. Why is this movie so iconic? by Joseph_Santos_Cruzz
You asked why is the movie so iconic, and then mentioned a whole heap of major things about it you could still appreciate from it.
Those things and it’s storytelling are why, it’s just not a film that resonated with you.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_ja91xd0 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Michelle Yeoh winning the Academy Award for Best Actress would be such a unifying and positive event but I'm scared the Oscars will disappoint on that department. by [deleted]
I mostly agree with what you’re saying, and with the bit about Scorsese, but at this point we can look at the nominees and and know what the best performance is.
Yeoh is great in EEAAO, but Blanchett is better in Tár, which I think most people who have seen both would agree with. Yeoh winning this year would very much be a career Oscar and not truly reflective of the best performance.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_ja8vc1x wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Michelle Yeoh winning the Academy Award for Best Actress would be such a unifying and positive event but I'm scared the Oscars will disappoint on that department. by [deleted]
That is true though to be fair. Career Oscar’s are a well established thing. Pretty much every year at least one of the acting awards doesn’t go to the best performance of the category.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6n819a wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Every Movie I Saw in January by Yenserl6099
No need to be an ass.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6kc1r9 wrote
Reply to comment by j_lyf in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
Sure, the songs aren’t very good, but they’re sporadically placed enough that it doesn’t really feel like a musical.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6kbua7 wrote
Reply to comment by 0xF00DBABE in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
It must be difficult to balance tackling fascism while remaining digestible for children, but I just don’t think it’s accomplished well at all.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6kbiol wrote
Reply to comment by Felinski in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
As far as biopics go, Elvis is not Oscar bait at all. It’s a very unique gaudy maximalist film, it doesn’t fit the conventions of “Oscar Bait”.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6k9uf5 wrote
Reply to comment by Huevos___Rancheros in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
He said it wasn’t just for kids, not that it wasn’t for kids.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6k9qy5 wrote
Reply to comment by editordeb87 in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
All the best.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6jox59 wrote
Reply to comment by editordeb87 in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
I didn’t say you said that, I said the argument your making accomplishes that. It might be worth reading the points I’m actually making before saying I’m misunderstanding you.
There is nuance, but you can’t complain I’m missing the nuance in your position when you don’t understand what I’m saying, and making incredibly specific statements that remove and ignore nuance.
You cannot say I’m twisting words, when you tried to reframe my argument as something else, and completely twisted the literal director of the films words to pretend it’s not aimed at or suitable for children, when GDT has said he made sure it accommodated them. A family movie is a kids movie. It’s not a kids movie in the exact same way Paw Patrol is, but it is still one. I’m not sure what capacity you worked on it, but your mindset does not align with the creative mind behind it.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6jmtxx wrote
Reply to comment by editordeb87 in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
The way that you replied to my comment absolutely acts as if that was the argument I was making.
Del Toro actually talked about how the audience includes children, it’s just not a “babysitter”movie that offers no value to adults. You’re misinterpreting what he said. If kids weren’t the audience here, the PG adaptation of one of the most famous childrens stories ever would not handle its subject matter the way that it does, (including watering down the war and fascism so that it’s palatable to them). Insisting that kids movies are actually for adults and not suitable at all just devalues animations potential as an adult medium to the people who don’t think it is.
It’s a real shame that on the rare occasions kids get a genuinely good movie that seeks to teach them valuable lessons, you wouldn’t recommend them to watch it, and not thinking it’s suitable to kids shows an incredibly blatant misunderstanding of the material and it’s suitability since the director has said he made it palatable for them.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6j6myv wrote
Reply to comment by editordeb87 in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
Bro come on, you can’t say you’re not being insecure about pretending it’s not made for kids, and then make a completely disingenuous rebuttal pretending I said something completely different and change the framing of the topic completely.
I never said animation is just for children, I literally did not claim that at all. I said Pinocchio is a kids film, which it is. It’s in the kids section of Netflix. It makes huge strides and effort to make itself palatable to children, and hold their hands throughout the entire thing story-wise. The entire purpose of how it presents itself thematically is to ensure that the children watching it get the point and take on the valuable lessons it has.
Adults can enjoy animation while also acknowledging that a film is made for children. It’s embarrassing that every time a kids film comes along that treats children with a bit of respect, grown adults like you have to pretend it’s not actually aimed at kids at all. If you want people who don’t respect animation to realise it can be for adults, actually champion animated films aimed at adults, instead of pretending films made for kids aren’t for kids, it’s not helping.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6j57gr wrote
Reply to comment by editordeb87 in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
I’ve seen him talk about it. There’s nothing in the film that was particularly deep and the film has absolutely no restraint in how it works thematically.
It’s absolutely is a children’s movie come on dude lmao. I like the film as well, you do not need to be so insecure about liking a kids movies that you need to pretend it’s not one.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6ilq1v wrote
Reply to comment by logicalnoise in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
I’m not pretending there’s no sub text, it’s just not a particularly thematically deep film, and the film beats you over the head with its main themes repeatedly, it does not expect the viewer to do much of any thinking. It’s a kids first introduction to its themes and that’s fine given that it’s a kids film, but it’s not a particularly “deep cut into humanity as a whole”
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6ih21n wrote
Reply to comment by Huevos___Rancheros in Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022) by Huevos___Rancheros
It’s constantly telling you exactly what the themes are, what the characters are feeling and how you should feel/ the lessons you should be taking away from it etc.
Understandable for a kids film, but still not something I think is good.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_j6iep91 wrote
It’s fine/good.
Wonderfully animated of course, but the material is ultimately very shallow and patronising, (which makes sense, it’s primarily aimed at children), it runs too long, and the songs are just not good for the most part.
Ok-Survey-9077 t1_jeehyd8 wrote
Reply to Hot take: Taxi Driver (in my opinion) is bad by [deleted]
Your take that “Movies should have a positive influence on people, they should really inspire people to chase after their dreams and be hopeful” is genuinely a horrendously reductive and embarrassing way to approach art. Art is about exploring and expressing the full range of humanity, not just a shallow slice of it that makes you feel good about yourself.
You’ve also not actually provided any meaningful critiques of the film, just highlighted your own extremely limited and childish understanding of film/art.