Patrick Degan wrote:Perinquus wrote:Jesus H. Christ on a popsicle stick! You are STUPID! I have repeated for the last three or four posts that there is a standard; it is merely a subjective standard rather than objective one. Yet you continue to insist that I think there is no standard at all. Not only is it a strawman distortion of my argument, it is one you keep repeating no matter how many times I correct you. You're stupid. Someone who is intelligent will not keep repeating the same mistake over and over again.
So sayeth Perinquus, the annoyingly repetitive idiot.
Which does not refute the fact that you have been continually misrepresenting my position.
Patrick Degan wrote:
And when did you pose that question? In the middle of all your blather about how "some people like A, others like B, and some prefer C..."?
Why weren't these "very evident defects" so evident to you last time you saw and enjoyed a movie that some critic gave a bad review?
Posted Sat Dec 20, 2003 12:51 am
You are too stupid even to keep track of what I am saying a mere one post back.
Oh, pardon me for not keeping track of every last tiny detail of your increasingly psychotic spew on this board. And yes, to answer your question, the defects were
very evident. The movie in question was
Battlefield Earth which I was screening for material for a
worst film festival programme book quiz. However, I'd hardly characterise the experience as wholly "enjoyable".
Does that satisfy you, fuckwit?
No, because you are full of shit, and you're dodging again. I said the last time you
thoroughly enjoyed a movie that a critic slammed dumbass, not the last time you saw a movie you thought was bad. You are stupid. You can't read and understand a plainly worded question, can you? Now if you are going to sit there and tell me that every movie you have ever liked has gotten a positive review from any movie critic who ever saw it, you are a lying bastard as well as a stupid one.
Somewhere out there, there is a negative review for probably almost every film you like. So again I will ask you. Why weren't the "very evident defects" that the critic based his bad review on so evident to you? Quite dodging and answer the question.
Patrick Degan wrote:Perinquus wrote:And in the case of a subjective matter, those definitions and standards are rather vague and inchoate, with a great deal of ambiguity and room for interpretation.
Competence in production, direction, acting, screenwriting —the main standards for judging movie quality which are quite well understood and accepted in common.
And yet competent directors and good actors, working from scripts written by talented screenwriters can and do produce movies that fail. This is because making a good film is more art than science, and is nowhere near as simple as adhering to some set of standards.
Patrick Degan wrote:Perinquus wrote:It is not like there is some clear line of demarcation, and anything which falls on one side is inarguably bad, while anything on the other side is inarguably good.
Something which I have
not been arguing at any point in this discussion and therefore is just another of your idiotic strawmen.
No, it's just what objective means. Something is either objectively right or objectively wrong.
Patrick Degan wrote:Perinquus wrote:In the case of a subjective standard, there is a sort of commonly agreed upon standard of quality, but defining exactly where the borders are is almost impossible. there is a lot of room in there for individual interpretation.
If a thing is "commonly agreed upon" it no longer falls under the definition of "subjective" —even if certain aspects are a bit fuzzy at the edges.
Yes it can you imbecile. It is not objective, if it does not fit the definition of objective, which I gave you earlier - no matter how many people believe it. GODDAMN you're stupid! It
does fit the definition of subjective. I'll give you that as well.
1. of, affected by, or produced by the mind or a particular state of mind; of or resulting from the feelings or temperament of the subject, or person thinking, rather than the attributes of the object thought of; as, a
subjective judgement.
2. determined by emphasizing the ideas, thoughts, and feelings, etc. of the artist writer, or speaker.
We are talking about how people react to a movie - their opinions or evaluation of the movie. That is
not a physical object, that is
not independent of the mind. It fits the definition of subjective, not of objective. Just because a lot of people hold certain opinions in common, that does not make that opinion objective, it just makes it popular. You have now appealed to popularity. "If enough people think it, it must be so". Nice fallacy you've got there.
Patrick Degan wrote:Perinquus wrote:This is simply not a matter of objective fact, like the laws of physics, or the properties of physical objects in the material world.
Man of Straw.
Simply parroting "Man of Straw" does nothing to show how I am wrong.
Patrick Degan wrote:You are the only person who thinks that anybody is arguing "rigid" categories. I've been talking about a general spectrum from best to good to poor to bad to worst, and how opinions of which films fall where on that scale —even given individual, subjective variation— are based upon commonly understood definitions and standards of artistic merit from which it is possible to form a competent opinion and to be able to explain it intelligently. Something you'd comprehend were it not for that tiny mind of yours.
Objective standards means rigid standards you idiot. You're the one who insists on using that term. I'm trying to use the terminology that actually fits.
Patrick Degan wrote:Oh, and speaking of people having trouble keeping track of an argument:
Perinquus wrote:By any objective criteria, the battle scenes in the new series are far more effective than in the old. They are more elaborate, they feature more vessels and show a much larger scope of action, the effects are more realistic, there is no re-use of stock footage, and they look more realistic.
Again, by any objective criteria, the battle scenes here were more realistic and exciting.
Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2003 7:49 am
Linky
That from the man whose been arguing that there are
no objective criteria when it comes to art/movie criticism for the last four days now.
THAT'S comedy.
Yeah, I wondered how long it would take you to dredge that up. But once again, you are comparing cheese and chalk. I have been talking this entire time about things like acting, direction, pacing, plot, characterization - all those things which go to make up drama and strytelling, and none of which are definable by "objective" standards, only subjective ones.
However the visual depiction of effects can be analyzed objectively using another definition of objective (Websters New Universal Unabridged Dictionary):
4. without bias or prejudice; detached, impersonal.
You can look at an FX shot without bias or prejudice and ask yourself simple, easily answered questions - questions with pretty obvious answers; is the new BG better than the old?
Yes. It is. Do you see more elaborate shots? Yes. Do you see more ships onscreen? Yes. Do you see a greater range of movement for the ships? Again, yes. Do you see greater detail? Yes, you see things like their attitude control thrusters firing when they maneuver, which is something they never showed in the original series. You see all this greater wealth of detail. Do the effects appear more realistic? Yes. You have to admit they do. Therefore, by any unbiased, unprejudiced (i.e. objective) standard, the FX shots in the new series are more realistic.
However, you cannot simply apply this same argument to the dramatic aspects of the show. Go ahead and try. Ask the same sorts of questions. Are the actors performances more realistic? If you answer yes or no, accroding to whom? This is not so clear cut. There is no simple yes or no answer to such a question. Some people will probably say yes and others will say no. How do you prove one or the other side right or wrong? Or how about another question. Is the story as well written? Again, according to whom? I am sure you will find plenty of people to say yes and plenty others to say no. How do you prove right and wrong in this case? Is the suspension of disbelief maintained as well? Same sort of possibility for multiple interpretations here.
When it comes to evaluating the dramatic aspects of directors' writers' and actors' performances, the answers are not clear cut and obvious, as with evaluating the realism of effects shots and other such things, and you are getting into the subjective territory again, because peoples' opinions are entirely in their minds.
But since you have so far proven completely unable to comprehend the difference between subjective and objective, I am sure you won't be able to see the difference here either.