Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
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- Decision to Leave -- (Park Chan-wook, director of Oldboy, The Handmaiden, etc.). It took me a little time to warm up to this, in part because I'm a Western viewer and it takes me about a quarter of a Korean film to fully register who the characters are, recognize them on-screen, and recall the names, but once that was established, it made more sense and I could become more emotionally engaged. [I guess at least I'm able to recognize the difference between Chinese and Korean when spoken, even when I don't understand it, and also recognize someone as Chinese versus Korean visually, which is more important in this film.]
It reminded me in some ways of Basic Instinct without the raw sex element (at least in the broad plot topics), but also reminiscent of Park's other works that are like a spiral or onion, each layer peeled back to reflect on earlier layers. I was fully emotionally engaged by the end, but I don't know if this was good or bad as I will be feeling this one for a long time. That part couldn't help but remind me of another film ending that I can't mention here lest I give it away.
I think the genre of mystery-romance is apt. There's actually a lot of humor as well embedded throughout the film, sometimes laugh-out-loud quality. The film sticks its landing beautifully, with a lot of ends tying up and reflecting on each other; it's just that the spaghetti nature of the early section can make it hard to find an entry point.
- Braveheart -- I hadn't watched this film for years. Basically, the pro's -- it's cinematic, it's gorgeously shot, it's inspirational and even funny at times, it tells a epic story about a hero, and the soundtrack is really evocative. The negative is what really makes it hard sometimes to enjoy this film now: It is one of the most inaccurate "historical" films ever made (almost nothing is accurate, the characters and their relationships to each other, the politics and social strata, the history. and the clothing, and the armor/weapons, and so on) -- it's not only like they didn't give a shit, but actively tried to just mix elements that span a thousand years -- yet it's tied to a historical figure which then gives viewers an entirely fictional representation of the history. It is also unnuanced in that the evil characters are evil, the good characters are unblemished, etc. I try to watch it now not as a historical film but just as an enjoyable fantasy that espouses modernized western ideals.
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