archive | I’m NOT interested in the review, but in the complaint about a generalized movie trend. The author, Louis Chilton, goes on a rant using about what he sees as having gone to far in and overly exemplified by the latest Marvel release:

If we are watching, as some critics have suggested, the death of cinema happen before our eyes, then it’s taken the form of a public execution.

It is a film that is about absolutely nothing – a film with no discernable purpose or artistic ambitions, beyond the perpetuation of its own corporate myth.

He explains a little:

Audiences didn’t love Blade because Snipes just showed up, stood there and barked catchphrases – he was part of a story, with a proper character, and stakes, and intentionality. That Marvel cannot see the difference – or, even worse, if it can see the difference but chooses to ignore it – is surely damning.

We call Deadpool & Wolverine a movie because it is released in cinemas, and is two hours long, but other than these technicalities, it shares almost nothing with a traditional blockbuster, when it comes to intent.

And finally concedes with admonishment:

And of course, people are allowed to enjoy what they like. But freebasing cocaine is surely enjoyable to many people; that doesn’t mean we should all get on board with its production and distribution.

  • ZC3rr0r@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    There is a market for movies that make you think as much as there is a market for movies that are just about spectacle.

    Calling one more true to the art of cinema than the other does a disservice to the medium and all the expressive, creative, and entertainment potential it holds.

    Calling it the death of movies is so hyperbolic, it is beyond nonsense and frankly smacks of elitism.

    • memfree@beehaw.orgOP
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      3 months ago

      What really struck me was that he compared Deadpool & Wolverine to Blade?! So… Blade is the movie with “discernable purpose” and/or “artistic ambitions”? I mean, I liked Blade, but if the complaint is that Marvel movies aren’t Citizen Kane, then Blade seems a weak comparison. So where does he draw the line?

  • tyler@programming.dev
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    3 months ago

    I thought the movie was great and so did my absolute cinephile friends. The author is just being contrarian to get clicks.

    • memfree@beehaw.orgOP
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      3 months ago

      Nah, he’s read The Hero with a Thousand Faces and/or subscribes to Suber’s ideas in The Power of Film and is doing a mental checklist of what Marvel lacks.

      Marvel hits the main points of a Hero story most of the time – where we have a Hero who comes from one place, goes ‘adventuring’ elsewhere and ends up doing a ‘thing’ that benefits the ordinary folks – but the frequency of needing a HERO over and over, and the escalation of what’s at stake (the whole world, the galaxy, universe, multi-verse, existence itself) means that after you’ve seen a few Marvel movies, the characters aren’t doing things that are new or different from what they did in other movies. Saving ‘normies’ is their day-job. Yeah, the path is different each time, but we keep seeing the same Heroes and most of them aren’t getting transformed by the journey and there are too many cases where the ‘sacrifice’ they make doesn’t have any real choice involved (if you can opt walk away from the drama then staying or doing ‘X’ is a sacrifice, but it’s no sacrifice if leaving means you die anyway).

      Suber suggests that a hero often has to GO AWAY at the end of the story. The normies are happy for help, but then they want to get back to raising their kids and the Hero is not good for that. I like that idea. More than that, I think that is the critic’s actual complaint. He sees this as another story in the same universe (multiverse) with the same characters and he wants something new rather than something comfortably familiar – and that’s HIS problem because lots of us would like more stories about the Heroes we’ve come to know and love.

      If it matters, my favorite Marvel story is the Loki TV series. It hits many of the expected markers and both the lead-up to- and the actual-ending both really resonated for me.

      • ulkesh@beehaw.org
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        3 months ago

        Has the author ever read a Marvel comic book, especially those from the 1960s-1980s? That’s what these Marvel movies are based on.

        Also, movie studios that find a formula that sells tend to beat that formula to death until sales plummet. Hence why they are still making Transformers movies despite them being garbage since the very first one with that Holes guy.

        • memfree@beehaw.orgOP
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          3 months ago

          Well he liked Blade, so I’m guessing his issue isn’t with comics in general.

          • ulkesh@beehaw.org
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            3 months ago

            I wasn’t suggesting he doesn’t like comic books. I’m suggesting he doesn’t understand that the Marvel movies are essentially following story, theme, characters, etc. from the Marvel comic books of those decades.

    • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      It was entertaining, but it wasn’t good enough to be in my top 10… or top 20.

      Honestly, I am not sure who the target audience was for that movie after seeing it. It was just a mashup of plot points that tried to hit every major category for every viewer at the same time.

      But… If Deadpool were to ever write a movie, that would probably be it.

      • ZC3rr0r@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        That last line captures exactly what I think they were going for. This was about as faithful of a Deadpool comic book as you could’ve made within the medium of movies.

      • millie@beehaw.org
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        3 months ago

        Well yeah, that’s not what super hero movies are for. Honestly, having a Marvel movie in your top 20 is just a good argument for watching a lot more movies. They’re fun but they’re not profound or amazing or particularly artfully shot or anything.

        For a Deadpool movie though? It’s perfect. It captures the chaos and reference-heavy nature of the Deadpool comics about as well as you could expect.

    • Papamousse@beehaw.org
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      3 months ago

      I am the target audience, 50yo, grown up reading comics in the 70s/80s, love Star Wars, am nerd, computer geek, played zillions RPG, saw all the SW, goonies, ET, BTTF, mad max, terminator and all shwarzy movies in theater, etc. Seriously, MCU movies are somewhat bad, dull, some characters looks like impersonator, heroes in thigh, actors lack credibility, too often bad CGI, stories are empty, I realized comics from the 70s/80s are really story for kids. They are actions movies, but uninsteresting. At 50yo I prefer to do something else during those 2 hours.

      • memfree@beehaw.orgOP
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        3 months ago

        Do you spend those 2 hours watching something with more ‘substance’ or do you do something else entirely – like play with your kids or read up on investment trends? For the time you do choose to use for passively consuming entertainment, is it in the medium of: books, tv, podcasts, music streams, or what? Regardless of medium, what sort of content is it (documentary, romance, action, op/ed, true crime, sci/fi, real-tech, instructional)?

        • Papamousse@beehaw.org
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          3 months ago

          Something else, gardening, cleaning up basement, etc. When I watch entertainment it is mostly tv/streaming.

  • pushka@beehaw.org
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    3 months ago

    no spoilers, but immediately after deadpool 2 i had one dream for a cinema thing to happen, and DP-3 was perfect for granting that dream <3 so fun n___n <3

  • Storksforlegs@beehaw.org
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    3 months ago

    This is a successful and enjoyable (and understabdably ludicrous, it is deadpool for craps sake) movie. This guy seems a bit confused about the current problem facing movies, and entertainment production generally.

    Its fair to be worried about what trends are driving what movies get made or not. But that is less to do with creative storytelling choices made in these movies. It is more studios being run by business vultures wanting short term massive returns only, even if it means no longer making anything else but trend chasing mega films.

    However thats a different conversation entirely.

    • memfree@beehaw.orgOP
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      3 months ago

      studios being run by business vultures wanting short term massive returns only, even if it means no longer making anything else but trend chasing mega films

      Two things on that:

      • I’ve heard studios now count on international deals so movies must shy away from anything that would get them banned in the major markets
      • the current age of cinema reminds me a bit of the precursor to the great 1970s film revolution where studios weren’t making enough money, so they started letting anyone and everyone take a shot at making movies and lo! the public suddenly had a wide variety of all kinds of things to watch

      I’m not sure we ever lost that variety, but no longer have the constraint of theater-only viewing that gets people to all see the same set of movies at the same time such that ‘different’ movies (like One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest or Star Wars as well as Smokey and the Bandit) were all getting attention and conversation at the same time.

      Now we have streaming from services and we can wait to watch movies until they become available online, so many films miss the box-office and never get the hype they deserve because only the biggest have publicity junkets promoting them online and on chat-TV. So maybe the critic’s actual issue is that – as a paid critic – he’s forced to watch the publicized flicks designed not-to-offend and doesn’t have the time to find all the other movies going under the radar.