So what would the steps that *you *would propose?
On 11/07/2014 08:38 AM, TurquoiseBee turquoi...@yahoo.com
[FairfieldLife] wrote:
I've figured out one of the reasons I was not knocked out by the
movie, BTW -- deus ex machina.
Given the basic plot (which I will not reveal), the real "lesson"
being taught in this film is that humans are pretty much fucked unless
some unspecified someone/something (be it alien or theistic) provides
a mystical Woo Woo way to save us.
I think this is dumb, on pretty much all levels. It's like Nabby,
waiting for Maitreya. It's a belief system that actually *prevents*
humans from taking steps to save themselves.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* "Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.net [FairfieldLife]"
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
*To:* FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
*Sent:* Friday, November 7, 2014 5:31 PM
*Subject:* Re: [FairfieldLife] Movie mini-review: "Interstellar"
Having seen the trailer I thought of the film as another one of
Warner Brothers "agenda" movies. This may well not pan out for WB
because people are getting a little sick of being manipulated by such
movies. But there may be enough bored people to get a good turnout at
the box office this weekend even if they don't like the movie.
WB is in deep shit and having to lay off people. But that's nothing
as it is happening to a lot of major corporations. The foolish elite
never learned the lessons that even Henry Ford knew that if you want
to sell product the public better have money to buy it. The attempt of
the global elite to turn the masses into chickens in coops hopefully
will fail miserably. After all who are they to dictate to us how we
should live?
On 11/07/2014 02:20 AM, TurquoiseBee turquoi...@yahoo.com
<mailto:turquoi...@yahoo.com> [FairfieldLife] wrote:
I'm still trying to decide whether I liked this movie or not.
It was certainly a visual treat, once we got past the visions of
Earth As Neo-Dustbowl About To Die and out into space. And as I'd
heard, it was certainly chock full 'o homages to "2001," not the
least of which is a spaceship-docking scene that really rocked the
socks off of "CGI state of the art."
I guess my main reservation is that Christopher Nolan seems to have
spent the lion's share of the movie trying to inspire in me a
profound emotional reaction to the father-daughter story he spent so
long developing, and none of that effort succeeded. If I was supposed
to be all teary-eyed at the end, I wasn't. If I was supposed to be
all inspired, I wasn't. And I can't really tell you why yet...I must
ponder the film and think about it further and maybe I'll be able to
come up with an answer.
A minor part of the reason may have been that so many of the actors
in the film -- Matthew McConaughey, Michael Caine, John Lithgow, Matt
Damon, and others -- seemed to MUMBLE their way through the entire
film. I found myself constantly having to look at the subtitles
(which for me were in Dutch) to figure out what they were saying. Go
figure.
The basic black hole plot was pretty intelligent SciFi, with few
completely cringeworthy moments, but if I have to make excuses for a
SciFi movie that was trying so desperately to grab me emotionally by
saying that nothing struck me as terribly awful scientifically,
something is just not quite right. I'll keep pondering it and try to
come up with some reasons for why I'm as underwhelmed as I am...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePbKGoIGAXY