Thursday 26 May 2011

Miscellaneous Quotations Regarding Fight Club



Great for critical debates angle for Fight Club - from an interview with Gavin Smith


I read the book and thought, How do you make a movie out of this?  It seemed kind of like The Graduate, a seminal coming of age for people who are coming of age in their 30s instead of their late teens or early 20s.  In our society, kids are much more sophisticated at an earlier age and much less emotionally capable at a later age.  Those two things are sort of moving against each other.  ~David Fincher, director of Fight Club, interview with Gavin Smith, "Inside Out," Film Comment, Sep/Oct 1999


[The movie The Graduate] was talking about that moment in time when you have this world of possibilities, all these expectations, and you don't know who it is you're supposed to be.  And you choose this one path, Mrs. Robinson, and it turns out to be bleak, but it's part of your initiation, your trial by fire.  And then, by choosing the wrong path, you find your way onto the right path, but you've created this mess.  Fight Club is the Nineties inverse of that:  a guy who does not have a world of possibilities in front of him, he has no possibilities, he literally cannot imagine a way to change his life.  ~David Fincher, director of Fight Club, interview with Gavin Smith, "Inside Out," Film Comment, Sep/Oct 1999


We're designed to be hunters and we're in a society of shopping.  There's nothing to kill anymore, there's nothing to fight, nothing to overcome, nothing to explore.  In that societal emasculation this everyman is created.  ~David Fincher, director of Fight Club, interview with Gavin Smith, "Inside Out," Film Comment, Sep/Oct 1999

Wednesday 11 May 2011

Essay for Homework

Popular film and emtional response question. Hand in on Monday please!

‘One of the great pleasures of popular cinema is surrendering to the film experience and allowing ourselves to be emotionally manipulated.’ Discuss this statement with reference to the films you have studied for this topic.

Wednesday 6 April 2011

Tasks for homework and Easter!

  1. Read over and organise your notes for La Haine, Amores Perros and Once Were Warriors
  2. Plan and write an essay that answers this past paper question: "How far do the films you have studied for this topic offer an analysis of the social issues they present?"
  3. Read ALL the Fight Club readings and take notes
  4. Read ALL material handed out for Popular Film and Emotional Response unit and take notes
  5. Organise all your notes into a logical order and condense if necessary - look for gaps in your knowledge and work to plug these. I want to see organised files, and evidence of not-taking during the first week back!
  6. We will return to Popular Film and Emotional Response topic after Easter.
  7. Go to the cinema and have a Happy Easter!

Thursday 24 March 2011

Wall-E

Personally I found Wall-E to be a very endearing character because of number of traits and qualities created by the film makers such as his inquistitive nature, for example when he goes out to work every day and finds the most random objects that a normal human being would have no care for, but to Wall-E the objects either baffle or amuse him. Such as an object as simple as a ring box. This leads me on to another point, the irony when he finds the ring box and throws the (what we assume to be very valuable (to us)) ring away and keeps this box, this emphasises his naivety which when mixed with his other childish and anthropomorphic traits, such as carrying a lunch box with him out every morning on his back like a primary school child makes him even more endearing.
Normally, a film with little or no dialogue in would put me off but I think that the characterisation of Wall-E and the setting and tone of the film, along with a nice uplifting happy ending made me made it a very enjoyable film to watch. It also made a nice change for a post-apocalyptic film, rather than the usual '2012' or '28 Day's later' style mass death productions.

Oldboy

My opinion of this film is somewhat of a mixed one... I thought that the film was pretty gritty from start to finish and some parts were grimly funny (similarly to the style of Fightclub) such as the part close to the start where 'oldboy' gets arrested. The plot of the film is in many ways deeply disturbing and in terms of Mr Wook's aims of a film (to focus on fear and pain), he has definitely produced something that taps into these feelings, both for the characters and the audience. Overall I believe it to be a good film, not necessarily one of the most enjoyable to watch, (which sounds kind of contradictory but it's hard to explain) but the construction and style of the film was very appealing, it's just parts such as the teeth smashing and tongue cutting that I found hard to watch, but hey... it's quite a shocking film so you'd expect events like that.

Monday 21 March 2011

Fight Club - tasks for Tuesday

Hi all
Below is a past paper question from Section C: Single Film: Close Critical Study....

"Consider debates that have arisen in the critical reception of your chosen film, either at the time of its initial release or now or both."

Clearly to answer a question such as this you need a good understanding of the critical reception the film recieved, both at the time it was released and subsequently.
To that end, you should spend the bulk of this lesson READING reviews and essays on Fight Club. While you are doing so - TAKE NOTES headed up with the reviwers name and date it was written - then add bullet points on the things they are critical of or positive about. What key debates did the film stir up? ARe there common themes/criticisms here? If so what? What is your view on it?

Remember to bring these notes on Wednesday, along with the other reading I gave you to do on FC.

Here are a few to get you started....but cast the net wider and read some more.

Roger Ebert review is here
Another review here, this one from culutre vulture.net.
And another here
Another here, a positive one, discussing some of the bad reviews it got (ironically hosted on the Roger Ebert site, written by Jim Emerson, who made this....


Condensed Fight Club from Jim Emerson on Vimeo.

ps - don't forget to comment on Wall-e and Oldboy posts - and complete your blockbusters games!!
 

Wednesday 9 March 2011

BLOCKBUSTERS

Created on DLD2! With the power of 2! :)
David, Jake and Jake - you need to do one too!
Jake W - I suggest you do one on Team America.
David, you have Wall-E.
Jake T - La Haine. (you have notes from French)

Go here to create one - don't forget to name it specifically for the film and use FM4 in the description.

Here is my one on Once Were Warriors:

Here is Marianne's one on Amores Perros:

Here is Jake's one on Team America:

Here is Davide's one on Wall - EEEEEE!

We'll be testing them out in class soon!