Ambidextroid wrote:Gravity had no story at all. You could write the story in, say, 10 words. Here, let me have a go:
(Spoilers I guess)
[Woman goes to space. Craft crashes. Makes way back home.]
That's exactly why people liked it, it was all about her struggle to survive and make it back home. You got to live inside her head and feel what she feels, experience her doubt and loneliness. It was an incredibly immersive/psychedelic experience for that reason; an intense narrative would have only gotten in the way and broken that immersion.
Are you saying you're unable to enjoy a movie like Fantasia because it has no story?
Everyone is different, but I don't think it's great for someone to require one particular aspect of an artform to always be prominent in order to give them enjoyment, it means you're closing yourself off to great experiences that don't lie within your little 'niche'. I myself can enjoy anything that's got good artistry put into it, and Gravity certainly has that.
Anyway, here are some movies I've seen recently:
Big Hero 6
A nice concept with a colourful cast of characters. This is one of those movies where I felt the first half was a lot better than the second half (in this case, I was really, really liking it when it was dealing with Hiro's school situation and technology, up until [
they became superheroes]). After that, it felt rushed and sub-par, but did contain a breathtaking ending scene, and I'm not referring to a third act, rather, one particular scene that shows up for about five minutes.
I don't know whether I liked it more than Frozen, but Wreck-it Ralph still takes the cake as being my favourite of Disney's aforementioned new yearly releases.
The Inbetweeners Movie
Raunchy of course and nothing special, but lighthearted and a lot of fun. I was laughing through pretty much the whole thing.
Laputa: Castle in the Sky
Rather old indeed, but probably one of my favourite Ghibli movies. I didn't know that the soundtrack was from this movie, I've always heard it all over the place.
Interstellar
I'm at a loss for words on this one. It is, without a doubt, one of the greatest movies I've seen in my entire life. Clearly very inspired by 2001: A Space Odyssey, one of my favourite movies, I think this is the perfect spiritual successor, and it matched 2001 for me. From the moment the first scene on Earth rolled in, I could feel the brilliant direction, my heart started pounding and didn't stop until the end. The cinematography, the narrative, the soundtrack, the visuals, the journey, the heart-wrenching emotion, the science fiction, it's a downright masterpiece, and I say this with complete sincerity. My friend Gordon (also loves 2001, is a huge film guy but also very critical, yet had almost nothing but praise for this movie) and I couldn't stop talking about it and actually shivering the entire night after we went to see it. I wish I'd seen it in IMAX, that would've been an even bigger experience. I hope to one day!
One particular scene I recall where [
they were flying by Saturn, accompanied by this beautiful, minimalistic piano music] put me in a trance, I was leaning back against my seat with my mouth half open, completely still.
I sincerely hope that this movie becomes remembered as one of those great films of our era, because it really deserves it.
Gone Girl
I thought Amy (the character, not the actor) was a terrible liar though, nothing about the way she conveyed her stories was convincing in the slightest, and the way she acted afterward was the complete opposite of how someone would actually act. Maybe that was intentional, but the the character's responses kind of tells otherwise, so I'd attribute it to iffy writing.
Don't get me wrong, I did enjoy the movie. It was surprisingly captivating and suspenseful, but it had some glaring flaws.
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies
It was swell! Whereas I thought the first Hobbit movie was really overlong, boring and lame, the second one was a huge step up, giving us an adventure, great environments (that water town), and the best dragon in all of film. The third one here I liked just as much as the second one, they managed to turn a two-and-a-half-hour battle into a heroic tale, which interestingly gave each character the chance to be explored more than in either of the previous films. The scene at the very beginning where [
Smaug is shot with the black arrow] was phenomenally done, and seeing [
the town and everyone in it burned alive] was probably the darkest, most intense scene in the series.
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I also saw some other, shittier movies I can't recall.