Blimey! This thread certainly took an abrupt turn!
370999 said:
We are going with the second one right? The everything being crap?
We were indeed! Laugh out loud.
The opoint is that unlike say, opera, films and cinema going are universal in appeal and don't especially appeal to braniacs or Johny idiot. Particular films might but as a whole I don't think you can say so.
I would argue that opera is not the least bit high-brow and that cinema is merely more financially accessible. Opera is just associated with the upper class as are certain films and accordingly can have either positive or negative connotations to different people. Some people will view Opera as pretentious whereas others will think the opposite. I've never been to an Opera, in fact the closest I've ever come to attending one was watching a Frasier episode involving it!
But in my ideal world people from every corner of society would like Opera for the right reason, because they simply enjoy it as opposed to trying to appear 'highbrow'. Likewise I'd love it if people who didn't like Opera did so because it's just not their cup of tea instead of saying to themselves "I hope people don't think I'm stupid for not liking this" or even worse "Opera is for snobs".
We come into a tricky subject here though, how do we view something as good or bad? This is a seperate (though related) issuse to what we like. An example for me is the film "Laurence of Arabia" is a great film IMHO, but I'm not sure how much I would like it, I could only watch it once and I admired the filmmaking but didn't warm to it.
"Date Movie" is IMHO a horrible unfunny film but I'm sure someone would argue that it was a cinematic triumph (though they might happen to be the directors). My problem is how do I prove the primacy of my opinion over there's? I don't think I can so ultimately my opinion is limited to myself, rather obviously actually but so was the wheel.
I believe the subject is far simpler than you think. There are basic tenements to making films, I wouldn't go as far as to call them rules but there are things that just work! I'm glad you said that "Laurence of Arabia" was a good movie and then said "but I didn't really like it". This means you know exactly what I'm getting at. As I've said before, and this is my main point, if a film is well made with good editing, direction, pacing and storytelling then whether someone likes it or not is irrelevant, it is not subjective, it is an objective fact that it is good!
Comedy is a slightly different story as the main objective is to make a funny film. Comedy is a very intricate craft as things like timing, delivery, irony, absurdism and so on all come into play. If it's funny then you've succeeded in making a good movie. If someone doesn't get a joke does that mean it isn't funny? I would argue not.
But then of course we have music which is vastly different again. While music can be completely broken down into mathematics and theory, it's much less rigid, there really are no rules when it comes to music but as I said about films... certain things just work. A major chord WILL sound joyous and uplifting, a minor WILL sound sad. A V-I chord progression will result in a perfect cadence. End of.
So how are we to distinguish between good and bad music and films?
To me, it is honesty and honesty alone.
I don't care how much I didn't like watching a movie, as long as it was done with integrity and you told a story then I'm all for it.
What on earth was the point of that sex scene?
Why was this not an 18's movie when it so clearly should've been?
Why was the camera panning down the protagonists abs while he did pull-ups?
In what way did this contribute to the story?
It didn't. And you were pandering!
When you pander to a demographic you are focusing on profit. Not art.
In the realm of music, pandering and dishonesty rears its ugly head in different ways...
In punk it's typically frowned upon for the musicians to be technically proficient.
In emo they all dress the same and all have the same bloody hair.
In rap they seem to continuously brag about wealth and wear excessively baggy clothing.
The list goes on and on but every 'scene' has a set of rules that prohibit artistic freedom.
And a look. Bands these days would be lost without their look as they would have no way of pandering to the sensibilities of societies various factions. And the fans would have no idea whether or not it's 'cool' to like a band because they themselves are morons. Music and image should not be synonymous. Sadly that seems to be the way.
And certain films have images and associations attached to them. Certain films pander to certain types of people. Others don't pander to anyone and are lost to obscurity despite being brilliant. The odd time a great film will get the recognition it deserves though this is a rarely occuring phenomenon these days.
EDIT: On topic, Scott Pilgrim, while it may have had plenty of computer games references and been thought of as a geek movie (which I would argue is not the case), it was marketed as a 'hip indie' Micheal Cera movie. And Micheal Cera carries weight in terms of an image the marketers were focusing on.
How bizarre. These people actually exist? I thought they were some hyper idealised version of teenage life where clans were created to make dramatic tension ("Oh no she's dating outside here clique, jow could she?").
Goodness me yes! Just by looking at someone you know exactly what music they listen to, what films they claim to like and so on. Most people know this and accordingly appear as they wish to be judged. Which is a pain in the arse for me as I have long hair and everyone naturally assumes I listen to Metallica and jump to all kinds of conclusions about me before they even talk to me and realise that I don't like only what they think I like but in fact anything that is good. And what is good to me? As I said above. The youth of today want to be segregated and immediately identified as a member of a faction. I do not, though it doesn't stop people from doing so.
A bit like wearing glasses. It doesn't make you smart. But it doesn't stop people thinking you are.