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In Reply to: Re: Lost in Translation. posted by Analog Scott on October 04, 2004 at 19:05:26:
Rich bored people are still people...Or a political aspect of your should not let one forget this principe.
Follow Ups:
I never said they weren't people. I'm simply saying their coping with their day to day boredom is not interesting. At least not to me. I've lived that movie several times. It isn't worthy of documentation. Just my opinion.
But anyhow, you missed the point. It was about how a somewhat post-middle-aged man dealt with his...aging. The superficiality of modern existence, the demands of business, the downside of the "jet age" with its substitution of electronic stimulus for physical contact...
It was Bill's struggle with potential boredom, depression, and feelings of worthlessness that formed the core of the movie. It was a scathing satire, hidden somewhat behind the jovial, long-suffering persona of Mr. Murray.
I guess you didn't care much for "Last Tango...," either?
"And so you dismiss all of Proust, Ayn Rand, etc?"No.
"But anyhow, you missed the point."
Are you psychic or just assuming?
"It was about how a somewhat post-middle-aged man dealt with his...aging."
That was a small aspect of the film. It was more about that wierd feeling of isolation one gets when trust into another culture while jet lagged. It is a quasi out of body experience. There you are in that hotel, bored. Then, there you are, wondering the streets of some foriegn country at three in the morning, bored and wierded out. When you run into some one who gives you a sense of familiarity to cling to them like a life preserver. I easily "got" the movie having pretty much lived it several times. I still say it is not very interesting.
"It was Bill's struggle with potential boredom, depression, and feelings of worthlessness that formed the core of the movie."Yeah, I got that. I rich middle aged man's struggle with the wierd bordom one often suffers in thier hotel room after just getting in town isn't a struggle that I find terribly compelling.
"It was a scathing satire, hidden somewhat behind the jovial, long-suffering persona of Mr. Murray."
A scathing satire? I don't agree.
"I guess you didn't care much for "Last Tango...," either?"You would do better just defending the movie being discussed rather than try to discredit my opinions of it by misrepresenting my opinons of other movies.
Hello Tin,
You choose to answer Analog Scott on another level I did. Mine was more political and or humanistic, yours more to the core.
I wonder which one gets to him?
"Hello Tin,
You choose to answer Analog Scott on another level I did. Mine was more political and or humanistic, yours more to the core.
I wonder which one gets to him?""Gets" to me? Is that the object when one has a different opinion than you? Are different perspectives so unsettling?
In the end we all are afraid of boredom.
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