Ford Prefect wrote:In the full post of what I just quoted, you chewed out Stark for repeating himself multiple times. However, the fact of the matter is you have said essentially the same thing regarding critics on multiple occassions. The actual wording is different but the intent is identical: that film ciritcs are essentially retards who think too hard about movies, and that pretensions at any sort of meaningful plot or thematic writing just makes the film maker a dickhead. I mean, just look at how utterly dismissive you are of the very idea of a 'deep plot'. You act as though your position is completely unassailable, and the implication of a lot of what you're saying is that you believe that people who do not similarily hold your position are, in this case, 'media snobs'.
Ok so you really do want to know, good that was very civil of you. I'm actually really shocked someone actually asked, since I took it as kind of a given everyone just dismissed me as being "that guy who likes action movies".
I said that ("that" being that I hold movie critics in contempt) because that's how I feel. Film critcs are, near as I can tell, just a bunch of grasping, self-important douches who have no actual authority other than the power that people (for some reason I can never understand) give them. Why should the subjective opinion of someone I don't know have any wieght on my personal likes and dislikes. Now I'm sorry if that bothers some people, but basically if you REALLY need someone to tell you how to feel about a movie, you can ask the bum on the street for free. The notion that someone is paid to think for other people (and as far as I am concerned that's what critics do) is hilariously ironic from people who supposedly pride themselves on their alleged intellectual prowess, i.e. "media snobs".
As for "deep plot", I have always used that term sarcastically...because it's almost never deep. Name a supposedly deep movie, 9 times out of 10 it's just a really dark movie, or a movie where two people talk about their marriage for an hour or something. That's not deep, that's not even character development, that's just self-indulgent, I've seen episodes of Aqua Teen Hunger Force that were deeper than some "deep" movies. I hold them in contempt because they're so pretenteous and so utterly stupid, and frankly their attempts at drama make me laugh. I actually went to see My Sister's Keeper because I found the trailer funny, and so did my friends. We went as a group, riffing the movie, I almost coulding breathe I was laughing so hard when they were dancing around on a beach...if that's supposed to be "meaningful plot" or something then, sorry, that's just stupid.
You want to know the most meaninful, emotional movie I ever saw? Terminator 2. I'm not close to kidding. I cried for ten minutes after I saw that movie as a kid, when the Terminator sacrifices himself to protect John Conner, and there was no ridiculous attempt at drama or anything just a naturalistic and fairly realistic (for what it was) scene where they say their goodbyes and he lowers himself into the steel. I was literally in tears. Having never had a father, the thought that, as Sarah put it, this machine could learn to be a father figure for John Conner struck me in the fucking heart. That was so natural, and so organic, and almost like a mistake...and that's why it worked. When someone TRIES to make something dramatic or "deep" it just comes off as overdone and silly to me. When it happens by accident--like real emotions in real life--that's when I like it. I felt more emotional about the sudden, atypical, anticlimatic death of Wash in Serenity than I did about the death of the girl in My Sister's Keeper because I didn't feel like the director was sitting behind me screaming "SEE! SEE! DEEP, IT'S FUCKING MEANINFUL!!!" in my ear like an obnoxious backseat driver.
Now as for the implications...well, yeah. If you actually watched, like, the trailer for Precious for example...and that didn't immediately strike you as utterly ridiculous then I'm sorry you're just not going to agree with me. People who find these forced emotions and pretentous pseudofeelings to be deep or even meaningful are being suckered in by what is in effect just really flashy handwaving. Most of these movies that have "deep plots" are all handwave. You're never asked to explore anything about them meaningful. You're never asked to actually THINK you're just told what to feel and, if you agree with them, you feel it. Why is Watchmen deep...because it's supposed to be. Why is South Park funny...because it is. Why am I supposed to care about X character...well because. The people who like that crap are the people who gave Meg Ryan a career. People who aren't me. And frankly I blame them for having to sit through countless trailers for The Time Traveler's Wife and Paper Heart and The Cider House Rules before seeing something that actually matters. You'd think these movies would at least not be predictable but they so are...I called the ending of that last one when I saw the trailer. My girlfriend saw it, she said I was dead on. I called the ending of My Sister's Keeper when I read a blurb about it in a magazine. I was literally DEAD ON with even the LINES they said. It's not just pretentous, it's stock. People who like that crap are fucking dittoheads that would make Rush Limbaugh recoil in shock. Brandslaves indeed...
I used to actually care that I didn't "get" this crap. Then I finally listened to one of those idiotic teen shows and decided to be myself...I have yet to see one movie that was ON PURPOSE meant to be "deep" or "meaningful" that actually was, like I have yet to see a song written to be purposefully deep or meaningful that was. These movies you guys like are the cinema equivalent of The Christmas Shoes: stupid, archaic, midnless overdramatic filler with as much plot as they need to get to some important scene where someone dies or something. The very fact anyone thinks that is "meaningful" or thematic AT ALL frankly makes me kind of angry, since it shows just how shallow these people are even when, I like to hope, they really aren't. It's like thinking a puddle is really shallow and finding out it's not even a puddle, it's a stain that looks like a puddle from a distance with about a femtometer of depth. And that's the fans, the movies are just mirages that look like stains that look like puddles, but only if you squint and tilt your head.
And I know that everyone and their brother thinks I'm a horrible person with bad taste and whatever, but really I can't even begin to care. If the alternative is basically being a dittohead (and yes, that's what a media snob is) then I'd rather die of cancer. I'm serious. I take pride in the fact that I only see movies I genuinely want to, and that I only give them praise if I genuinely feel I should, and everyone else's opinion can go fuck itself. That's why I make a joke about having bad taste every five seconds...the fact that term even exists, as if something as arbitrary as "taste" can be measured, strikes me as the literal height of arrogance and shallowness. To me, it's a joke, a running gag, I've come to truly feel great pride in that because I know what the alternative is, and it makes me feel good I've outright turned my back on it.