T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
605.2 | | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Thu Jun 20 1991 14:54 | 1 |
| Why not?
|
605.4 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Thu Jun 20 1991 15:00 | 2 |
| Why not handguns at thirty paces? Wow! Cut the tension with a knife?
|
605.5 | take the risk, Herb | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Thu Jun 20 1991 15:10 | 9 |
| C'mon Herb, if you can't trust, Gerry, you can't trust anyone.
I've never seen Gerry fail to apologize, when he steps on
someone's toes. He fights hard, and you may have a big
job on your hands convincing him that your toes got stepped
on, but he delivers. He's really consistent.
Wil
|
605.6 | | TNPUBS::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Thu Jun 20 1991 16:03 | 12 |
|
> Why do you want to know?
Because I have a deep dark hidden agenda meant to castrate all males
whose politics do not align with mine.
(Because I was tired of the heavier discussions in here that I was
involved in, because I love movies, because I love talking about them,
and...just because.)
--Gerry
|
605.10 | | HANNAH::MODICA | Journeyman Noter | Thu Jun 20 1991 16:50 | 13 |
|
Tis time like these I wish we had a rathole topic.
(Would the mods reconsider?)
All Gerry did was ask about a movie and based on what I've seen
and read, it could and should make for a fine topic in mennotes.
I'll look forward to reading a review here from any
men who might go see it.
Hank
|
605.11 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Thu Jun 20 1991 17:32 | 14 |
| > Have you seen the movie?
Yes.
> What do you think?
Ridley Scott should stick to Sci-Fi.
> Was it man-hating?
Yes. I enjoyed it as much as getting a hockey puck in the groin.
Kris
|
605.12 | Let's hear it for Gerry's agenda! | CRONIC::SCHULER | Have a nice Judgment day | Thu Jun 20 1991 18:02 | 23 |
| RE: .9
Oh please. Any gay man who writes here openly as an equally important
and valid member of society is *automatically* "pushing the acceptance of
homosexuality as an appropriate life style." Further, implicit in gay
relationships is support of feminism insofar as it purports to break down
gender roles.
This is news?
You announce this agenda as if it were some kind of secret subversive plot.
Yes. Yes. I, for one, am shocked!
I've followed Gerry's noting for YEARS and as far as I'm concerned,
the stuff about intentional insults and embarrasing comments is just so
much sour grapes. Your damn right he's articulate and if that causes
you frustration maybe you ought to take an expressive writing course in
order to keep up.
/Greg
|
605.13 | | BIGUN::SIMPSON | Myopically Enhanced Person | Fri Jun 21 1991 01:00 | 1 |
| Um, what's the movie about?
|
605.14 | fmnist::olson, visiting... | AKOV06::LAMOTTE | | Fri Jun 21 1991 08:19 | 8 |
| Thelma and Louise (Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis) are two women who's
home lives and relationships are not entirely satisfactory, who take
off for a weekend of fun. along the way, stuff happens and they become
fugitives from the law. they run for awhile. It has been called the
great american road movie, ala Bonnie & Clyde or Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid, but for women. I haven't seen it yet.
DougO
|
605.15 | But I'll have to go see it to enjoy the fun! | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 184# now, 175# July | Fri Jun 21 1991 10:00 | 12 |
| I've not seen the movie, but I've read a half-dozen reviews. It's for
women, apparently, in that women are highly likely to like it and men
are not. However, it's certainly not a feminist movie, in that (1) the
two protagonists are living anything but a liberated life-style as the
movie opens, and (2) their response to their awful domestic problems is
to go on a shoot-'em-up like any MAN would. Apparently the women don't
act like women, e.g. one of them is entirely unforthcoming about her
personal life and history, e.g. one of them is continually on the make.
This is a male-buddy film adapted only by substituting persons with
ovaries for the usual persons with gonads.
- Hoyt
|
605.16 | | TNPUBS::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Fri Jun 21 1991 10:44 | 26 |
|
> In the absence of specific evidence to the contrary I believe that the
> quote below is illustrative of why I feel that your motivations are not
> trustworthy.
Herb, I wish we were talking face to face. I think that it would be
easier for me to explain where I am coming from.
I'm human, too. I also feel tired and anxiety ridden over the
discussion in (what is the name of the note?) "War of the Sexes."
Even though I don't mind talking in discussions that get heated, I
certainly don't want to _live_ like that. I'd have so many ulcers
that I'd have to have my stomach removed.
I just wanted to talk about movies, that's all. Movies, to me, are
fun. I suppose I could have talked about the male bonding scenes in
"City Slickers," but "Thelma and Louise" does seem to be the movie
that most people are talking about (it's on the cover of 2 national
magazines and has a major article in the third).
I'm really not a monster, Herb. You've seen a side of me that you
don't like. But I can also be a really, _really_ nice guy, too.
I am not my notes.
--Gerry
|
605.17 | | TNPUBS::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Fri Jun 21 1991 10:52 | 15 |
| > He is a very articulate man and that I feel causes a lot of frustration
> among our brethren.
And you accuse _me_ of being on a mission!?!
I'm a bit floored by this attack. I really, _really_ thought that,
overall, I was mellowing out, that I was not as judgemental and
hard-headed as I used to be. And I do believe that I can get
mellower. But it doesn't happen overnight. I'm working on it.
I can't believe that my character is being reduced, primarily, to one
string of note replies. I think I'm being judged unfairly.
--Gerry
|
605.18 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Jun 21 1991 11:16 | 40 |
| I think it's an unfair judgement too, Gerry.
I have known you through the Men's Forum work and
have heard you talk about what you are working on
and I see it happening, and I have a lot of admiration
for what you are doing and the path you are on.
It does not bother me at all that you have an
"agenda", in fact, I admire you for it. And I think
you are up-front and honest about that agenda and
that you don't beat anyone up over it. That gets
a lot of respect from me, and I listen hard when you
speak.
And when you are "into" a note, exchanging replies
hot and heavy, and someone cries "foul", I see you
"go away" for a while, and I wait with anticipation
for your return, because I know that you will have
done some hard work on it, and that it is going to
be worth reading. Sometimes your hard work leads
you to a new realization about how you were relating
and I have seen you apologize to the person or persons
who were crying foul. And sometimes, you realize that
the cry of "foul" was unjustified, or a result of a
misunderstanding of where you were coming from, and
you carefully restate yourself.
That's what gets all my admiration. You know where you
are going, you are careful and considerate of others
and you work hard at it.
That's why I said that if you can't be trusted, then
no one in this notesfile can be trusted.
I took your opening question as a simple interest in
discussing the movie. I didn't feel that you were
setting a trap.
Wil
|
605.19 | Two thumbs down for Thelma and Louise | BUSY::JBILL | | Fri Jun 21 1991 13:52 | 32 |
| I hope this works, because I'm not an experienced noter, so bear with
me.....
I saw the movie "Thelma and Louise" and was EXTREMELY disappointed! I
would not recommend it. I was under the impression that it would be a
'fun' movie, but was very depressed by the whole plot.
I don't know if it could be termed a "Man hater" movie, Thelma has a
very egotistical husband who wants her to be the little woman who is
seen not heard, to be there all the time at his beck and call....things
like that. I honestly don't know anyone who is as much of a jerk as
this person was! Louise wanted to force her boyfriend to reach a
decision regarding how much she meant to him. Later in the movie he
comes through for her, no questions asked, and is definately a
fantastic friend.
Thelma was not very intelligent, and as a result, the majority of the
scrapes they got into were her fault. I found myself anticipating the
really foolish things she was going to do and their repercussions
before they even happened. It was disappointing to find out I was
right. They put her is situations that anyone with any type of common
sense would walk away from.
The police officer/detective who was assigned their case, was a very
nice character. He wanted the most to help them out of the mess, and
was genuine in his intentions.
Those were the main characters...........I thought the whole movie was
very unrealistic, and from the middle to the end, it was extremely
depressing.
Two thumbs down!
|
605.20 | what _is_ a good movie playing this weekend? | MAST::DEBRIAE | We're a Family of Assorted Flavors... | Fri Jun 21 1991 14:13 | 25 |
|
-1
Thanks for the review.
I never paid much attention to the movie
because I wasn't too impressed with the previews I'd seen of it
(looked like a grade-B movie, but with female main characters
instead of male).
After being surprised that someone said this film deals with
feminist agenda, I called a few friends more in pulse of women's
issues than I am to get the scoop.
From what I gather... it is not a feminist film by any means. The
scenes involving a woman being raped and then sleeping with a man
(of her own will) the next night were especially controversial.
It is not an anti-male movie, as men are displayed with both good
and bad traits (as were the women).
I dunno. Unless I hear otherwise I won't see this film. The plot
seems to wear really thin and seems quite contrived... typical
summer-release movie? :-)
|
605.21 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | Have a nice Judgment day | Fri Jun 21 1991 15:48 | 7 |
| RE: .20
If you haven't seen _The Grifters_ yet, I recommend it.
It was playing at Copley Place in Boston on June 8th.
/Greg
|
605.22 | I liked it | TNPUBS::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Fri Jun 21 1991 16:40 | 129 |
|
I thought the movie was fun. I like road movies ("Butch Cassidy and
the Sundance Kid," "Easy Rider," "Something Wild," and "Wild at
Heart").
I liked some of the male characters. I really liked the head
detective (who was also one of the only sympathetic male characters in
Demi Moore's "Mortal Thoughts," also playing a policeman). I liked
Sarandon's boyfriend. And I liked the hitchhiker (and disagreed with
some friends as to whether he was a "positive" male character in the
film; I thought he was okay). Davis' husband and the truck driver
were cartoons, so I laughed at them and didn't take them seriously as
Men.
Although I didn't think that the movie was man-hating (Thelma and
Louise never attacked a man who didn't attack them first; they never
violently went after men just for the sake of "getting a man"), it
is...different...watching a movie with no sympathetic leading man.
Watching Hollywood movies for years, it's not what I'm used to.
I also think that it is very difficult to understand the events of the
film outside of the whole context of what was happening in the plot.
The movie is a road movie (which are usually summer-action movies, not
much in the cerebellum department). You know, two buddies make a bad
decision and hit the road to try to find their salvation. But there is
something really new, exciting, and exhiliarating about the growing
sense of freedom and power that these women begin to feel. And it is
rare to see this happen to women as main characters in a film.
Spoiler:
Outside the context of the film, a woman choosing to have sex one
night after a rape doesn't make sense. Also, the criticism that women
probably would have shared their secrets with each other (instead of
Sarandon refusing to tell the story of what happened to her in Texas)
is probably more realistic. The same goes for the criticism that a
friend of mine used against the movie: "Their driving through the yark
and knocking over the clothes line [a scene that I've seen in 100
car-chase movies; what about the "Blues Brothers," for god sakes] was
dangerous because there could have been kids in the yard." It's very
true.
But it does't fit what was happening at that point in the movie. They
were desperate. They were wanted by the law. And everything felt
very accelerated. There wasn't a lot of free time to sit quietly,
reflect, and chat.
Here's a good explanation [from "Time" magazine] as to why it "works"
that Sarandon never explains what happens to her in Texas and why
Davis decides to sleep with the hitchhiker so soon after an attempted
rape:
"...'The violence I liked in a way,' says Sarandon, "because
it is primal, and it doesn't solve anything."
"[The event in Texas] is blessedly unexplained. In the
aftermath of the killing, we do learn that something
dreadful happened to Louise years ago. Obviously, it was
some kind of sexual assault, but she never reveals it's
exact nature. This, of course, runs counter to the
conventions of popular culture. If this were the TV-rape-
movie-of-the-month, a hysterical revelation of the exact
nature of the abuse--expecially if it were, say, gang
rape or years of incest--would be obligatory in order
to balance the moral scales.
"Such an explanation would have quelled much of the "male
bashing" criticism leveled at the movie. But it would also
have cheapened the movie in some measure, suggesting that
some kinds of sexual violence grant their victims murderous
entitlements while others do not. By leaving Louise's
mystery intact, the film implies that all forms of sexual
violence, great or small, are consequential and damaging.
[and about Thelma:]
"Literalists criticize Thelma's erotic awakening
because, they say, it could not happen so soon after
the trauma of near rape. Doubtless that would be true
in circumstances less special than the ones the movie
sets up. The point it's insisting on is that a sudden
access of freedom is eroticizing as well as empowering.
[And this about taking the film in general:]
"This [unselfconscious quality], indeed, is its salient
redeeming quality. If it were as certain and as clummsy
about what it was up to as its more virulent critics think
it is, it might easily have been as overbearing--and as
deadly--as some oftheir interpretations of it are. It is
not, though and anyone with a sense of recent film history
can see the movie in the honorable line of movies whose
makers, without quite knowing what they were doing, sank
a drill into what appeared to be familiar American soil
and found that they had somehow tapped into a wild-rushing
subterranean stream of inchoate outrage and deranged
violence [I _like_ deranged violence in a movie!]. "Bonnie
and Clyde," and "Easy Rider," "Dirty Harry" and "Fatal
Attraction"--all those movies began as attempts to vary
and freshen traditional generic themes but ended up
taking their creators, and their audiences, on trips
much deeper, darker, more disturbing than anyone imagined
they were going to make...And (best thing about these films
really) they have a way of driving some people--the ones who
think movies ought to be a realistic medium or an
ideologically correct one--crazy.
"Should we care (that they aren't realistic or correct)? As
Barbara Bunker, who teaches psychology at the State
University of New York, Buffalo, very sensibly notes, "It's
a dramatic piece, not a [literal] description of what's
going on in our society. It seems to me that drama is
supposed to make things larger than life so you get the
point." Agrees Regina Barreca, who teaches English at
the University of Connecticut and is the author of "They
Used to Call Me Snow White...But I Drifted," a book
about women and humor: "It has got to be seen not as
a cultural representation but as a fairy tale." In other
words, as a dream work, full of archetypes and
exaggerations.
I think I'm having more fun with all the articles on the movie than I
did with the movie itself. And I really liked the movie. I like
something that is quirky and really hard to pin down.
--Gerry
|
605.23 | | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | There is no sanity clause | Fri Jun 21 1991 17:51 | 21 |
| Eric, I wish you wouldn't try to review films you haven't seen.
I liked this film, would give it a 7.5 out of ten, did not see it
as a man-hating film, thought the acting of Geena Davis, Susan
Sarandon, and everyone else was very good. I also did not see the
truck driver or the character of Harlan as charactures, as I have
met guys just like them both, I hate to say. Ridley Scott used
atmosphere in a very interesting way, as well. I thought most of
the film as very believable.
The ending of the film was too over-the-top for me, and the film lost
some of it's credibility for me then. It was a too self-concious effort
to become mythic.
The film is not just a buddy-road picture with women substituted for
men. It was about women in trouble. It is not just another 'summer
release' film; there is a good deal that is original and creative
in this film, with some good character development and depictions.
-roger
|
605.24 | | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | Just A Country Boy | Sat Jun 22 1991 16:35 | 9 |
| Sorry, I'll have to wait to tell you when it comes out on video. :')
Mike aka "couch potato"
Nah, really it has to be a comedy or something I'm really interested in
(Backdraft) for me to shell out that kind of money for a movie. All
you who use the phrase "putting out fires" go see backdraft and then
tell me.....I hate that expression.
|
605.25 | fine art of betting $7 to get films that work for you... :-) | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | Ich will Spa�; ich gibt das, ich gibt das... | Sun Jun 23 1991 22:21 | 10 |
|
Not to worry Roger, my reply clearly stated that those were my
impressions from the previews and not from the film itself.
I'll let you know what my impressions are when I see the film...
on cable. :-)
Just saw "Nuns on the Run" on HBO. Boy am I glad I didn't throw
$7 after that film, oy, yet another disappointment...
|
605.26 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Mon Jun 24 1991 10:42 | 11 |
| Well, I'm a very erudite person with very refined tastes :^), and my wife
is even more refined. But I got her to go see "Nuns on the Run" in
exchange for my going to some artsy-fartsy movie (which I enjoyed
immensely). Well, let me say, the person who got absolutely the
silliest in the whole theater was my wife. It was almost embarrassing.
It was well worth the money to see her screaming with laughter at such
low humor. I got pretty silly myself. I think the movie works better
with an audience. It might not work so well at home with little
resonance from lower types in the audience. :^)
- Vick
|
605.27 | The preview was pretty bad... | TNPUBS::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Mon Jun 24 1991 12:16 | 20 |
|
[Blush of embarrassment] I paid to see "Nuns on the Run." I got
burned on that one.
Also, to tip my hat to what Erik is saying, I almost couldn't get my
friend to see the movie because he thought the preview was so stupid.
And he ended up loving the movie. But we have this running joke about
the preview:
Thelma says, "Ya-hoo!"
Louise says, "Ya-Hoo!!"
They both say, "Ya-HOO!!!"
And then they blow up a truck.
I've been sending him E-Mail messages that just say:
"Ya-HOO" (*BLAM*)
--Gerry
|
605.28 | but I may wait for the video - it still doesn't look worth 3 tickets | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Mon Jun 24 1991 16:43 | 8 |
| There are 3 reasons why I "have" to see this movie. One is that
my wife's name in Thelma and my mother's was Louise. An other is
that the previews looked fairly interesting and funny. The third is
to make up my mind for myself what all the fuss in media, Usenet (you
should read what they're saying about it in talk.guns.politics), and
notes.
Alfred
|
605.30 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 24 1991 17:06 | 16 |
| It's been a long time since I've seen such moaning and wailing in the press
about a movie, and I find it rather peculiar that so many seem to be
reeling in horror about "man-bashing" in this film, when for so many years
movies have tended to treat women like dirt. Maybe if for the next thirty
years all we saw were movies where men get "blown away" by women, there
might be cause for concern, but I'm not going to get excited over one film
which simply reverses the roles of men and women of any one of hundreds
of earlier films.
Sometimes I wonder if all the fuss is a deliberate ploy to increase ticket
sales. I'm sure that the producers are laughing all the way to the bank!
I haven't seen the movie in question and don't have plans to do so, so I
won't comment on the film itself.
Steve
|
605.31 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | In withdrawal:handle gently | Thu Jun 27 1991 09:35 | 17 |
|
I've seen this movie, and I loved it.
For me the key themes were female friendship, growth, change in
self-perception......a keynote line for me was "something's crossed
over in me, and I can't go back"....
I was so excited by seeing these female themes shown through the
movie that I hardly gave the men's roles a thought.
There were the typical mysogenistic stereotypes who, for a change,
did get to deal with the consequences of their actions.
There were some "good" men too to balance that out.
I also thought the soundtrack was excellent, and the scenery was
very lovely.
'gail
|
605.32 | Just a movie | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Thu Jun 27 1991 13:55 | 5 |
| I saw the movie, I enjoyed it. It made minor commentary on
men-woman relationships. I didn't find it man hating, maybe
jerk hating.
-Jim-
|
605.33 | I may even go see it....8^) | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Carvers are on the cutting edge | Thu Jun 27 1991 16:37 | 15 |
| <<< Note 605.32 by GLDOA::KATZ "Follow your conscience" >>>
>
> I saw the movie, I enjoyed it. It made minor commentary on
> men-woman relationships. I didn't find it man hating, maybe
> jerk hating.
Isn't that what a lot of movies and TV shows are about lately, Jerks
who should get the short end of life for a change? (Sorry, I don't enjoy
much TV or many movies.....mostly for the reason expressed....)
Vic
PS:On the other hand, I am glad to see a movie where the woman is something
more than cute/useless/dumb/helpless/manipulative/etc/etc/etc.....It sounds
like this movie fits that description.
|
605.34 | I didn't feel hated... | BROKE::ASHELL::WATSON | sophisticated simplification | Thu Jun 27 1991 17:22 | 6 |
| I don't think it was man-hating. Male-truck-driver-hating, maybe.
It's very funny. The relationship between the two central characters is
very well done. I'd recommend it highly.
Andrew.
|
605.35 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Jun 28 1991 09:49 | 27 |
| Well, I saw it after reading the recommendations here.
I wish I had not seen it. I found it sad and depressing.
I don't think it was man-hating. I think it was
society-hating. "The world is all screwed up,
let's escape, get drunk, blow away what we can,
including ourselves."
The only two "decent" men in the movie are totally
ineffective. They can say sympathetic things, but
they can't change what happens.
Thelma "crosses over" after being raped, screwed,
robbed and after drinking a LOT of Wild Turkey.
Some small steps forward: they throw the empty
booze bottles in the rear seat in order not to
litter! There is a policewoman in one of the
chase cars.
Do we make movies like this because society is
this screwed up, or is society this screwed up
because we make movies like this? Does this
movie make things better or worse?
Wil
|
605.36 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | In withdrawal:handle gently | Fri Jun 28 1991 10:40 | 26 |
|
>Do we make movies like this because society is
>this screwed up, or is society this screwed up
>because we make movies like this?
I think we make them because they reflect experiences, or fantasies,
or release feelings that many of us have in common because of our
shared experience of living in this society.
I'm not sure that this means that our society is particularly
screwed up - just that "civilized" social living in this century is a
strain, and certain "hotpoints" are shared by many and can be used as
communal releasers in our efforts to stay sane.
>Does this movie make things better or worse?
I think it makes things better.
Before you can change things you need to become aware that there's
a problem. I think that movies like this that deal with today's
"hotpoints" can help to motivate change - if it does this in only
a few of the audience then it's a few more people working to change
our world.....
'gail
|
605.37 | | TNPUBS::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Fri Jun 28 1991 11:58 | 25 |
|
> >Does this movie make things better or worse?
>
> I think it makes things better.
I agree. Not so much because it has a powerful impact on changing
society, but because it allows people to feel about, think about, and
empathize about the darker and more upsetting aspects of life without
having to risk trying them out.
I made a similar comment about the Mapplethorpe exhibit, that it
allows people to relate to a risky and widely misunderstood behavior
in a relatively safe environment.
For two hours, you can empathize with what it might be like for two
women to respond to violence with violence before they are subsumed by
their own bad decisions and by a system that doesn't provide healthier
outlets for powerful women.
...and, maybe, after thinking about it for a while, people might be
motivated to so small things, in small ways, in our everyday lives, to
let women be a little more wild and free.
--Gerry
|
605.38 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Jun 28 1991 12:04 | 20 |
| Yeah. I see your point, 'gail. The movie certainly
illuminated a problem. And so maybe it woke up a few
people in the audience.
I guess I would have liked some glimmer of hope behind
the illumination.
The final resolution of the problem for the women is to
(literally) ride off the edge of the world, ie, escape.
The final resolution of the problem for the men is summed
up by the stoned (black) bicyclist blowing smoke from his joint
through the bullethole (made by the women) for the trapped
and sniveling authority figure roasting in the trunk of his
police cruiser in the middle of the desert. And I found
myself laughing hardest at this point.
Was there anything hopeful?
Wil
|
605.39 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Jun 28 1991 12:09 | 2 |
| I guess I'll have to wait for "Thelma and Louise, Part II"
for the hopeful segments? Next summmer...
|
605.40 | Hmm. generation of women given 'male'-like role models?? | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | It's July; Le Tour de France!! | Fri Jun 28 1991 14:41 | 8 |
|
Wil,
You know personally I'm waiting for "Thlema and Lousie -
The Next Generation". :-)
-Erik
|
605.41 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Jun 28 1991 15:28 | 4 |
| So is Sigourney Weaver going to play the title character in "Terminator 3"?
That would be interesting....
Steve
|
605.42 | pant, pant.. | USWS::HOLT | Karakorum Pass or Bust! | Fri Jun 28 1991 15:46 | 1 |
|
|
605.43 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Mon Jul 01 1991 10:00 | 4 |
| Weaver is going to play in another Alien movie, with a 'brush cut'
hair cut.
BJ
|
605.44 | | TORREY::BROWN_RO | There is no sanity clause | Tue Jul 02 1991 20:52 | 10 |
| Wil:
I don't understand why 'hopeful' is necessary in a movie. To me,
that would be the old, happy-ending syndrome that made Walt Disney
and many others famous. 'Truthful' is a more important quality to me,
and whether that truth is happy or sad is really irrelevent, as long
as that truth reveals.
-roger
|
605.45 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Wed Jul 03 1991 10:11 | 85 |
| Roger,
I guess I agree with you that 'truthful' is more important
than 'hopeful.' This movie drags you into the truth, without
any doubt, and I don't want to run away from the truth even
when it is painful.
By 'hopeful', I don't mean a happy ending. Thelma's husband
is not going to go from bad-ass to saint, Louise's man-friend
and the sympathetic cop are not going to get her off with a
suspended sentence, the women and their men partners are not
going to walk off into the sunset, hand-in-hand. I agree
with you, that would be a trash ending to an otherwise
'truthful' movie.
But I don't get any message that says, "Here is how bad it can
be for some people, and yet even at this level of badness, there
is the possibility that it can be turned around, and something
better can happen, albeit with a lot of work and against the
odds."
Instead, I get the message, "Here is how bad it can be for some
people, and if you (the woman) try to do anything about it,
here is how much worse it can get, and in the end, you will
either suffer worse than you are suffering or you will welcome
death."
For a woman who is ALREADY "out of" that scene, who is already
liberated, who is already capable of avoiding that snake-pit
that Thelma is in, the movie may be a real blast, because she
can revel in the freedom and joy of the joyride, and she can
take the rape, screwing, robbery, boozing, etc at a kind of
metaphorical level, and the "release" that comes at the end
is a kind of endorsement of her own freedom, perhaps hard-won,
and so it gives her a shot of self-pride. She knows that
this can be changed, because she has changed it for herself.
But I have known a couple of women who were (and still are)
in situations like Thelma's, and they are so beaten down in
spirit, that I don't think they can see this movie and get
anything but more scared, more angry, more depressed, and
more helpless. They are holding tightly to the little bit
that they can control. Often it is their kids, sometimes
it is a job that gives them some satisfaction, sometimes it
is some kind of "goodness" that they can pour out in some
little way in school, neighborhood, church.
They have friends who urge them to be more assertive, to
fight back, to DEMAND that their husbands change, etc.
Like anyone who has kept something locked up inside themselves
for years, their fear is that once they let out their assertiveness,
their anger, their demand to be treated better, that they will
go "crazy," that they will not be able to control it, that they
will be out of control (a terrible fear) and if they think
beyond that fear, that they will lose everything, including the
few things that they have. Often these husbands have guns,
and they are afraid that they will end up using their husband's
gun on him, because THEY DON'T KNOW ANY OTHER WAY TO FIGHT.
It looks to them that if they let themselves feel their anger
they would not be able to stop themselves from blowing him away.
So what does this movie tell them? It says, "Hey, leave him a
note on the microwave, and have a fun few days with your girl
friend. Let him shift for himself." Then, an hour later the
movie is telling them that after
you have gone out of control, been raped, screwed, robbed, after
you have committed armed robbery, locked a cop in the trunk of his
cruiser, blown up a gasoline truck, and left a hundred miles of
highway littered with wrecked police cruisers, all that is left
for you and your best friend is to drive off the edge of the
world. "That's what it leads to, little lady. That's what will
happen if you get out of line."
I think the women that I know would "decide", without admitting
it aloud, that they had best hunker down, count their small
blessings, and keep their mouths shut.
What I wanted was some kind of hope, some kind of escape for
Thelma via some kind of empowerment. (and some kind of escape
for Louise from a haunting memory that she has kept locked up
until, when she lets it surface, causes her to "blow away"
the rapist.) See how this movie feeds a beaten woman's worst
fears?
Wil
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605.46 | | GUESS::DERAMO | duly noted | Fri Jul 05 1991 22:15 | 10 |
| re .31, "and the scenery was very lovely."
Oh yes, this movie had the best backgrounds I've seen
since Silver Streak. As a Massachusetts resident I need
to be reminded sometimes just how much natural beauty
there is in this country. :-) [just teasing, folks!]
I've got to spend a couple weeks touring this country
sometime.
Dan
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605.47 | Myth and Archetype | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Just workin' my Path | Mon Jul 08 1991 05:57 | 20 |
|
"T&L" is opening here in the UK this week - there's been a lot
of media coverage, anything from "Film 91" (the most
respected film guide on television) to "Spare Rib"....
In "Time Out" (the weekly London events guide) there was a
discussion with Ridley Scott where he raised a point that I
found illuminating....
Basically, he said that Thelma and Louise's trip is a "last
journey" - sort of an odyssey in the mythic tradition - and
that the events and people they meet along the way are
archetypes....
This made sense to me. Archetypes are not the same as sterotypes,
but they are symbols rather than individuals - would this
account for the view of the male characters as relatively
"shallow", in your opinion?
'gail
|
605.48 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Jul 08 1991 11:15 | 31 |
| The "rescue" of the policeman from the trunk of his cruiser
had some kind of statement in it. (The story could have left
him there, or could have showed another cruiser coming along
to investigate why the radio transmission failed.) The fact
that he is rescued by a black man riding a bicycle, dressed
in gaudy colors, puffing on a huge joint, and that the black
man first blows smoke into the trunk of the cruiser is mythic
stuff. I would say that the black man is the jester, the
trickster, the court clown, telling authority (the king) to
cool it. I laughed hardest at this point.
And the herd of police vehicles, near the end, traveling at
high speed across the desert, all in a line, also seemed
surreal, but I don't have the myth to relate it to.
And of course the final "flight" is a release from the
groundedness of being in the world, and being subject to
all the trials and tribulations of the world as defined by men.
But if Ridley Scott is using the archetype/myth argument to
divert attention from what the movie says about how to live
(or how to avoid living) as a woman in a grounded world, then
I think he is puffing hard on his own joint and blowing smoke
in our faces. He becomes the trickster himself, and in effect,
the movie then becomes his joke on the audience.
Are you laughing or are you angry? Is he the good trickster
or is he the evil trickster? (Every archetype has a "good"
and an "evil" side.)
Wil
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605.49 | 'Thelma and Louise' (*spoiler alert*) | BROKE::ASHELL::WATSON | TNZBHDV | Mon Jul 08 1991 12:11 | 13 |
| First of all, I read somewhere that Geena Davis said that men offended
by this film are identifying with the wrong character. I wouldn't have
put it like that, but can see what she means...
Secondly, I'm glad I didn't read this topic before I saw the film. I'd
know how it ends, and I'd know about most of the "surprises" along the
way. Perhaps the title of the string could be changed to include a
spoiler alert?
Lastly, without seeing the film again and doing an exact count, it
seemed to me that there were more stereotypes than archetypes.
Andrew.
|
605.50 | | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | There is no sanity clause | Mon Jul 08 1991 14:27 | 17 |
| The 'mythic' part for me was the lamest part of the film; when
a film-maker conciously reaches for it, it doesn't work. The
film started to go downhill for me at the exact point that
the dope-smoking bicyclist showed up.
It is one thing to present an archtype; it is another to illuminate
some aspect of it in an original way, with some insight attached.
I happened to see "Rebel Without A Cause" for the first time in many
years this weekend; it is pure Robert Bly material, that became
mythic because it struck a common nerve and resonated, by presenting
a small down-to-earth story, by staying in the real. Talk about no
male role models, and trying to mentor oneself!
-roger
|
605.51 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Mon Jul 08 1991 14:43 | 39 |
| I only see movies about every six months or so; last fall it was Ghost,
last winter it was Dances with Wolves. Friday I saw Thelma and Louise.
I walked out of that movie trying not to cry. My SO was really upset, too.
Not being a videophile, I've found that the emotional impact of a movie can
hit you really hard if you're not used to having your emotions jerked around.
I'm not hardened to all the deaths in modern filmmaking. OK, that was first.
Trying to come to terms with it; there's always a need to suspend disbelief.
I found that suspension very easy in this movie. Everything that happened
(apart from the ending, which I'll discuss separately) I could easily see as
happening sometime, somewhere, to someone. There are (how many?) women married
to ignorant, dominating, infantile men like Thelma's husband. There are (how
many?) urban cowboy bar hustlers who'd knowingly spin a woman around until she
got sick, to get her alone; who'd rape her given the chance. There are (how
many?) women who've been pushed around so many times that one final time,
sassed by the attempted rapist, would trigger rage. And so on down the chain
of events; ignorance, bad luck, bad timing, unfortunate history, the whole
thing could happen. Scott was making a statement about what kinds of buttholes
men can be, and are, out there in the real world. All of those men EXIST; most
women who meet them don't dare fight back against them, because the system won't
support them. Louise knew that. Once she'd fought back, she knew she had to
run. That was the lesson her life had taught her "in Texas".
And during the running, the freedom they found! Nothing left to lose. They
didn't want to hurt that state trooper; and they didn't. They didn't mind
teaching a trucker a lesson; and they did. In both cases, the ignorance and
arrogance of the men, dealing with women, was breathtakingly normal. (Some)
men act that way because they can usually get away with it. Swaggering around
in his uniform, or leering from the truck window; those men were just asking to
be taken down a peg. Thelma and Louise merely obliged.
Well, so much for the logic of movies. Its way past time for moviemakers to
begin to explore the capriciousness of the ordinary male and the limits (broken
in this movie) that such boorishness often places on an ordinary female. I hope
that Scott's movie makes people think about what women have to put up with, for
a little while. Lord knows not enough men are willing to admit it happens.
DougO
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