The Required Amount at the Prescribed Rate (Handcrafted From the Finest Corinthian Leather)
Melancholia Makes My Wife Angry (Except For One Brief Moment)
Melancholia, a pretentiously artsy film about depression and the end of the world, did not have the intended effect on my wife . . . instead of making her melancholic, it made her very angry-- the slow pace, the random unexplained images, the self-absorbed and despicable characters-- these finally grated on her nerves so much that-- after an epithet laced hour-- she quit watching, but she got the point: it's a film about the earth's demise, but because you have no emotional attachment to the people in this movie, you don't feel much anxiety as the end approaches; though the characters are awful people, living pathetic, anxiety-ridden lives, I wanted to see their final disintegration, and so I pressed on until the end, but really the most fascinating images are at the beginning of the film, and so while I certainly can't recommend this slog through Lars van Trier's imagination, you might try the watching the montage at the start and the horribly awkward wedding scene . . . Kiefer Sutherland is great, though Kirsten Dunst is rather annoying as a melancholic . . . but I think she got a boob job, so there's that to look at . . . and the one thing that my wife and I both liked about the movie was more of a happy accident than something intentional-- during the generally disastrous wedding, there is one romantic moment: the guests make Chinese sky lanterns and launch them into the night, and this was a helpful scene for my wife and me . . . after we saw The Hunger Games, when we walked out into the dark parking lot, we saw some odd, spooky lights in the night-sky, rising rapidly in formation and then burning out, and after much speculation and discussion, we determined that they must have been Chinese sky lanterns and now, after seeing them up close in the film, we are certain that is what we saw . . . and so for that, and for that alone, Lars van Trier, my wife thanks you.
You could have watched The Hangover Part II and seen Chinese sky lanterns. You'd have been just as unenthused, but the film hardly evokes anger. Plus there are way more boobs, fake or otherwise.
ReplyDeleteAlso, how are Chinese sky lanterns not blatant littering? This has perplexed me since the first time I saw them. We don't think they just vanish when they're out of sight, right?
ReplyDeleteI had the same thought -- what if one gets stuck in a tree and lights it on fire?
ReplyDeletedidn't see "hangover II" but probably has a lot more jokes than "melancholia."
ReplyDeleteyou definitely should have to get some sort of permit before you release fire balls into the air over a populated region-- these things were floating over middlesex county, which is as densely populated as india!