Tuesday, December 18, 2012

sugar cane


 The movie Sugar Cane Alley or black shack alley (which was apparently too vulgar for the theatres), is set on the Caribbean isle of Martinique, where slavery was huge. A boy, Jose, has lost his parents and is being raised by his grandmother, Ma ’Tine. Ma ‘Tine does not want him to share the same life as her and the other people in the village by beginning to work in the sugar cane fields. Instead, she sends him off to school. During school he is met with a challenge, one of his teachers thinks he cheated on one of his papers, the teacher thinks it is too good to be written by a boy his age, but after discovering his background he realizes that he did not cheat and that he is actually very gifted. His grandmother dies of what we can assume was a heart attack. The movie ends with Jose going back to school, leaving the sugar cane fields in the past.

persepolis

There was a question asked in class about the role religion played in her life and if this movie was trying to convey the need for religion. I’m in the middle with this idea. I think that religion was important in her life, maybe not so much during the middle when she was having trouble in life but definitely in the beginning and end. In the beginning she is seen talking to god almost as if she was talking to a friend. She follows his words and takes his advice and is very routine in doing such. Her life is good but when she asked him to leave it gets bad, and in the end when god comes back her life becomes better. I think she is trying to say that her life got better when god was a part of it but I don’t think that she is trying to push god on to anyone, just simply stating of showing her findings on religion

man on wire


I enjoyed the movie man on wire. I like the idea that a man who was tight rope walker saw objects or buildings around the world and his mission was to walk across them. How many people on earth can say “I walked between the twin towers.” Only one person ever in history can say that. He truly is one of a kind. The years of training on the tight rope while having his friends tug and pull on the rope to create a real like simulation of what could happen when he is up there. This man and his friends where truly dedicated to do this. The risked their lives trying to accomplish these acts and spent some time in jail for it as well.

They created fake lives in an attempt to get to the top of the tower with success. They waited under a tarp, motionless, for hours on end to string up the wire. At one point Philipe was naked searching for an arrow so that he could find the string attached to the end to pull the wire across and when the wire was slacked between the two towers his friends spent hours of hard work trying to pull it back up. The dedication it took from all of these people to make one thing happen is incredible. This maybe the only thing they are remembered for and it’s sad that the towers where destroyed because they were a symbol of what they did.

zombocolypse


I think apocalypse movies in general are a big hit in the media right now because of the whole end of the world thing. People see a zombie apocalypse as a possibility. We have all of the TV show’s like dooms-day prepares, the walking dead, falling skies, and the colony. Everyone loves to watch these shows because it makes people think “well what would I do if this actually happened? Where would I go, how would I survive?” I myself have thought of this before and have a fool proof plan to outlast an apocalypse.
 My plan is to gather my three closest friends, gather our own weapons and ammunition at our disposal and travel by my car to Cabelas in Kansas City. We would then spend months preparing a war machine made from a semi-trailer equip with the top gun of a tank, many turrets, a flame thrower, and on the front end a big spiked snowplow. Then after months of building this machine and gathering as much food as possible we would then travel around the U.S. gathering people. Once we have around 300 people and enough food we would then go down to Florida where we would acquire a cruise ship. On this ship we would be able to survive forever

Monday, December 10, 2012

nightmare


The nightmare before Christmas should absolutely be named a Tim Burton movie. The concept of this movie was Tim’s to begin with he just had other people help him make his dream a reality. If they didn’t give Tim the credit he deserved then it would be a form of plagiarism. It’s just like an athlete writing a book, they didn’t actually write the book themselves they had one or even a team of authors help them do it but it is still called their book. Another reason they named it a Tim Burton movie was probably strictly for publicity. Many people will go to see a Tim Burton movie just because he was the one who made it, no one would go see a movie by someone they‘ve never heard before. Yes, Tim’s name was put on the cover of this movie even though it wasn’t directed by him, but the people who helped out in the movie still got the credit for what they did; they were all recognized in the credits and got paid so I don’t see why it is such a big deal to everyone. Putting Tim Burton’s name on the movie was the correct thing to do.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

scissor hands

A happy ending could have been a possibility for Edward. If we assume that saving Kevin works out and he is seen as a hero then he would go back into society they way he did before with everyone wanting his art work in their yard, on their head, and even on their dog. Edward was different from everyone but they saw it as something that was new. They town they live in was so “cookie cutter” it was easy for Edward to stand out and become popular one might say. Every one in the town saw his hands as a deformity and every one who knew a doctor or plastic surgeon offered up their assistance to him. Edward seems eager to meet these doctors because he wants to become normal. If Edward was to get new hands he wouldn’t be as special. In my opinion the reason Kim was interested in him was because he was different and that he truly cared about her. In the end if he was to get new hands he might get the girl but he might not have the same social status as he did before. To him this would’ve been a happy ending but to some it might not be the case.

Friday, October 19, 2012

the secret impresses some: the prestige


I believe the secret impresses few. With that being said, the secret impresses me. Knowing the secret takes away from the “AW” moment but I think it lets me know how simple or complex a trick can actually be. If I see an amazing illusion and find out the secret to doing it is actually very easy then it amazes me even more that something so simple can create such a spectacular thing makes the trick even cooler, especially seeing the look on peoples face when you know the trick and they don’t it makes them wonder. For example in the prestige Angier went to great lengths to discover Borden’s trick for the transported man but found out it wasn’t as spectacular as he had imagined. And the same with Borden when he found the truth to Angier’s trick, when Borden discovered that the “magic” was actually real science he was amazed. So I truly believe that knowing the secret doesn’t take away from the trick, it takes away the mystery sure but sometimes the trick of doing something might be more jaw dropping than the actual illusion itself. A lot like Angier’s machine, the science behind it is way more fascinating than thinking he used a double

highnoon


I think it was interesting that the townspeople would not help Kane even after everything he has done for them. From what the movie says Kane has done just about everything he can to make this town better. He put Frank Miller in jail because he murdered someone. You would think that the townspeople wouldn’t want frank back in their town regardless of the type of business he brought with him. Also when they were in the church and one of the men stood up and said that “if the people up north heard about the violence Frank and Kane would cause that they wouldn’t send companies down to their town because it might be too dangerous” was a dumb comment to make because clearly when frank was in the town it was already dangerous to begin with when he’s out getting drunk and obviously killing people. I don’t think anyone in this town had very many morals or respect for Kane at all. He asked for their help in his time of need and they were nowhere to be found but they were perfectly okay with having him clean up the streets for him prior to all of this.

definition of obsession


                I believe that the line between obsession and commitment is at the discretion of the observer. For example, in sports many people train hours and hours every day to get better, trying to make it to the next level, some might think this is obsession but to the person putting in the time to get better it’s just his or hers own commitment to the sport. Many think that obsession occurs when you sacrifice your own family for the thing that you are doing, but to some people family isn’t the most important thing in their lives, to some family comes a close second to other maybe more important things.

                When you look at the movie The Prestige, you notice that the two main characters are going to great lengths to perfect what they do. The story follows Robert Angier and Alfred Borden, rival stage magicians in London at the end of the 19th century. With the goal of creating the best stage illusion, they engage in a competitive warfare of magic with tragic results. The rivalry started when both of these men were working for the same person and Angier’s wife was killed by Boren when and allusion went wrong because Borden tied the wrong knot in a water cell trick causing Angier’s wife to drown. After this event Angier discovers Borden doing some low end magic in a saloon. When Borden’s assistant Fallon is choosing a helper from the crowd a disguised Angier is selected to help Borden by shooting an un loaded gun at him so he can perform a bullet catch. Angier knowing of the unloaded gun slips a projectile down the barrel to fire at Borden blowing his pinky and ring finger off of his left hand. This is when you could say the rivalry began because here after, they both attempt to sabotage each-others illusions and one-up each other.

                We start to see the true dedication of these two men when Borden and Angier begin to perfect the illusion of the transported man, but both have different methods of preforming it. When Angier first sees Borden perform the trick he vanishes in one cabinet and his double (later found to be his twin) appears out of another.

Angier picks a person off the street who looks remarkably similar and cast’s him to be his double so he too can perform the trick. After Borden corrupts Angier’s double things in Angier’s show begin to go wrong. One thing that happens is the bad to catch Angier when he vanishes below the stage is missing and ends up hurting his leg severally causing him to have a limp. Another thing that happens is when Angier vanishes below the stage, he sees Borden standing in his doubles place to go out before the audience and when Borden does he promotes his own show while displaying a trapped Angier (his double) hanging from the ceiling.

When Angier learns of Nikola Tesla (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikola_Tesla) he travels to Colorado Springs in America to have this man make a machine that can truly transport him. Nikola is successful in this attempt at such science but the machine makes a duplicate of the object and either transports the duplicate or the original which we may never know, either way this is some crazy stuff. Anyway, Angier brings this machine with him back to London and demonstrates it to a theatre owner. The owner agrees to allow him to do his show here. Angier has a trap door set up right under the machine so that when it is finished making a duplicate or original the “thing” standing on the trap door will disappear into a glass box full of water and left to drown, Angier gets away with this by hiring a blind stage crew and never reveling his secret to anyone. When Borden is at one of his shows he notices the trap door and goes back stage to confront Angier or maybe sabotage it (we may never know) and see the duplicate or original in the locked glass box. Seeing what he assumes is Angier he tries to break the glass box and when people hear it they rush back to see a dead Angier and a guilty Borden. Borden is then put on trial and sentenced to die for murder. Borden is given Angier’s journal to translate his trick and then he discovers it was Angier’s plan all along to frame Borden for his death so he would hang, while the duplicate or original Angier is out running around. Borden is then hung , but his twin brother is still left and he shows up to an all alone Angier and shoots him.

                I believe both of these men were border line obsessed with magic. I understand that they wanted to be the best but they took being the best to an extreme. I don’t think Angier would’ve done any of this had Borden or his brother not killed Angier’s wife. However Borden was also playing a double life the entire time he was in London. Both of the twins were in love with different girls to the point where the double life began to conflict each other. In this case these two men were trying to be the best they could be. So I personally don’t believe they were obsessed.

 
 

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Did Catherine write the proof?


The question of whether or not Catherine (Gwyneth Paltrow) wrote the mystery proof that mathematicians have been trying to solve for years is answered clearly in the movie. The proof found in a locked drawer in the desk in Robert’s (Anthony Hopkins) room after Catherine gives Hal (Jake Gyllenhaal) the key (this is extremely important because Robert is now dead and was crazy for his last five years, and to find that he had written an important proof during his last few years would’ve been huge). As Hal rushes down stairs exclaiming how important this proof is and how it could change their lives, after a dispute with Hal and her sister we find out that Catherine claims that she wrote the proof. Due to a flashback during the movie it shows both Catherine and her dad, Robert, working on what seems to be the proof. When Catherine thinks she has figured everything else she runs up stairs to her father’s room where he too is waiting with a “proof” in hand telling her it’s some of his best work. After Robert hands the proof to Catherine demanding that she read it, she finally reads his proof out loud. The proof that Robert has written has nothing to do with math at all, only proving more to him and Catherine that he is extremely crazy. This shows that Catherine wrote the proof because it is in her hand writing and she can explain the whole proof in detail, as she begins to do at the end for Hal. So the question of whether or not Catherine wrote the proof shouldn’t be asked because the movie clearly shows that she does. That being said I hated this movie and thought it was extremely boring.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

The "Broadway melody" portion in singing in the rain was both relevant and unneeded in this movie. In the beginning of this section it starts out showing his trip to Broadway and how he got his chance with being a star. But after that, all of the other scenes I felt were useless and hard to follow. Like the scene with the gangster and the lady in green and the lady in white, I saw no need for that in the film. I think it was just used for extra dance scenes for the movie so Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly) could show off his dancing skills or to possibly add another 20 minutes to the movie. Overall I thought this was a well-made movie. I personally liked how they incorporated the difficulties of getting the sounds correct with the positioning of the microphone, and how they ended up using Kathy Seldon’s (Debbie Reynolds) voice for Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) so that she wouldn’t sound all high pitched and annoying.

Monday, October 1, 2012

harvey's truth


In the beginning of the movie Harvey is doing good things and helping out the city but when the things that mean a lot to him are taken away I believe that is when he becomes corrupt. He was a good man and he wanted to clean up his town, to he started putting the mob in jail and doing it in bulk. As the movie progressed and he was targeted by the joker, and his fiancé was killed and his face was burnt off, he sat in his hospital bed wanting revenge. When the joker came to his room with answers and a solution Harvey thought it best to let the joker go because in the end he wasn't "fully" responsible for her death because he wasn't the one who picked her up. Harvey goes out of his way to kill or hurt these people and he puts innocent people in danger just for his revenge. I believe that Harvey was good but through a series of unfortunate events he was corrupted into becoming a villain.

sorcerers apprentice


I really liked the concept of this movie and how they put it together. However, I think it was very unfortunate that the magician had to die all because his "wife" was evil. I can’t believe she would cheat on a magician for an acrobat, it’s not like the acrobat can pull a rabbit out of his hat. That’s the only thing that is unrealistic about this movie but i am glad that in the end Hugo killed her because that was highly ironic that she said the wand would give him power and in the end it was the cause of her death. Well the saw killed her, but the thought that the wand would save her killed her.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

movie or film?

I believe the arguement between movie and film differs on ones opinion based on the ideas of the cinema's meaning to that one person. In my personal opinon the movie Forrest Gump is under the classification of a film. The underlying theme of this movie is "don't judge a book by its cover" becasue although this man was mentally slow, and looked down upon by people who met him, he was still a war hero, a millionaire, a college football star, a national running icon, and most of all a ping pong champion.

Intro

Hey there, my name is Colton Kooser and watching movie is my 17th favorite hobby. Generally I watch movies specifically for entertainment but after being in Mr. Boyer's lovely film and lit. class i have realized that movies have much more meaning than just to pass time or make you laugh. :)