>Movies and Mastication

>I could have titled this Film and Food, but Movies and Mastication just has a certain ring to it.

Okay, so I have this reoccurring tendency to compare watching movies with eating food, and the preparation of a meal with the making of a film. I know the link between the two is technically weak. I know I am not the first person to think of it either. And I also know that in many cases the analogy can offer some interesting insights. A simple example is that one’s taste in both categories can greatly improve with some guidance and education. Another example is that a diet of either only junk food or junk films will lead to a kind of jelly-fied bloating.

Lately, however, I’ve been thinking of the combination of food and film. That is, the selection of particular comestible spreads with particular cinematic fare for an overall enhanced experience. I figure this is a little like choosing an ideal double feature combo. For example, one might say that pizza and film “X” make a great combo (although I am imagining gourmet food as well). Imagine you have invited some friends over to watch one of your all-time favorite films and you also have to provide dinner (or lunch); what would be the film and what would be the meal?

Truth is, I love to cook, and I’ve been thinking for a long time about working on a cookbook. Today I had the idea of writing a cookbook that combined my passion for cooking and my passion for good films into a food/film combination book. And although I know the concept just might work, I am stumped for ideas. Plus, I want to start inviting more friends over for films and food on a more regular basis. So I’m looking for any ideas anyone has. Let me know what you think.

I think it would be appropriate to include a list of drinks as well – good wines, mixed drinks, iced tea, whatever.

Also, has a book like this been done before? I’m curious.

“Art-Cinema” Narration: Part Three

This is the last part of a three-part posting taken (reworked) from a brief lecture I gave during a film class years ago.

The other posts are Part One and Part Two. The main purpose of these posts is so that I can clarify some of my thinking on cinema – I’m sure my posts will shorten over time. I imagine that most of those blogging on film these days will find this rather pedantic and abecedarian. And I will also make a disclaimer that virtually all of “my” ideas come from other sources, not least of which are the writings of David Bordwell, esp. Narration in the Fiction Film. My lack of proper citations is due my having lost my notes from that class.

I must say that the ideas in these three posts provide some foundation for the concept of “contemplative cinema” which is the subject of an upcoming blogathon at Unspoken Cinema here: Unspoken Cinema: BLOGATHON. I plan on putting together my own specific thoughts for the blogathon, but I think this post may stand as my entryway into the subject, even if only obliquely.

Art-Cinema Narration and its goals.

Compared to Classical Hollywood Narration, the goals of Art-Cinema Narration are quite different.

Just a few distinctives:
Characters focus on the existential choice:

  • That choice which is about one’s very existence and very reason for existence.
  • Character(s) struggle at the crux between meaning and meaninglessness.
  • Or between expectations imposed externally (society, religion, school, etc.) and one’s desires.
  • These struggles are very much within the struggles of the 20th and 21st Century’s individual as described in the previous posts.

Focus on the interior life of the character:

  • The mental world trumps the mere overcoming of external obstacles. This is often played out narrationally as “psychological effects in search of their causes”
  • A searching for answers to one’s mental state, etc., but of course they might be presented in a very subtle way; it is hard to show what is interior.
  • Often the littlest, most insignificant things can be what triggers a wholesale reexamination of one’s life.

Redefinition of “Reality” and “Truth”:

  • Acceptance of coincidence, randomness, “and plausible improbabilities” as the ground of daily life.
  • The anomaly is normal, the clear causal chain of events something to question.
  • Characters search for truth while believing there is no such thing.
  • “[T]he world’s laws may not be knowable, personal psychology may be indeterminate.”
  • Foregrounding the problem of subjectivity: both within the story being told (subjectivity of the characters) and the very process of telling that story (subjectivity of the filmmakers).

And, as you can imagine, compared to Classical Hollywood Narration, the cinematic results are going to be different. One could argue that Art-Cinema Narration is really just a way of making films that remain “true” to the modernist mindset.

Some observations on how these goals are played out:

  • Often “looser” more ambiguous plot constructions.
  • Plots are less “neat”, less clearly motivated. Classical Holly Narration usually has characters who know what the problem is – the building is going to blow, the terrorists are going to do something bad, the mystery needs to be solved, the misunderstanding needs to be resolved, etc. Art-Cinema Narration may not have such clear-cut problems and therefore may have rather diffused goals – such as fighting boredom, or finding oneself, or finding meaning, or just existing.
  • Plots are not always logical or fulfilling of viewer’s expectations. Asks the viewer to do more. May be subject to question: “are we seeing the truth?” What is the truth?
  • Characters are often less clearly defined Ambiguous, may not fit into traditional stereotypes, inner turmoil, may change.
  • Self-conscious narration: The film “knows” it is a film and is not afraid to let you know that it knows. This can be done numerous ways, for example: characters talking to the camera, overt narration, breaking film “rules” etc. The film may even “show its cards”; may reveal the camera in a mirror, etc.

I must stress, however, that even with the seriousness the many of the ideas underlying art-cinema narration, many so-called art films are no more profound than any classical narrative films. And art films can fall prey to the same shallowness and overt “posing” that affects much of the art world as a whole.

One of the more interesting things, in my mind, about the history of cinema is the existence of both kinds of narration – Classical Hollywood and Art-Cinema – side be side throughout most of the last one hundred years. And certainly they have had influence upon each other.

As for contemplative cinema…
According tot he folks at Unspoken Cinema, contemplative cinema is the kind “that rejects conventional narration to develop almost essentially through minimalistic visual language and atmosphere, without the help of music, dialogue, melodrama, action-montage, and star system.” It seems clear to me that contemplative cinema then may be considered a sub-set of Art-Cinema Narration.

>a personal aside…

>…but aren’t they all?

I woke up this morning convinced I should stop using the name “cineboy” while blogging and just use my real name, Tucker.

Why “cineboy”? The name “cineboy” came about like this: about 5 years ago at my job we were all told to change our IM contact names for security purposes. The contact names could not have any part of either our own name or that of the company. So after I tried several ideas only to discover they were already taken, I finally chose “cineboy” as part of the name. I chose it because it reminded me that the job I was in did not define me. The name “cineboy” reminded me of my past education and my past & present passions in the midst of a job that was not feeding my soul – and eventually it just stuck with me. So there you have it, “cineboy” is a goofy name, and in no way do I use it to indicate some unusual insight into cinema (for my knowledge is about as deep as a children’s wading pool), rather it has personal import for me. Therefore, although I woke up this morning thinking I should stop using the name, I have now reconsidered and will still use it – though you can call me Tucker anytime.

Finally: I started this blog in Dec. 2006. So it’s still in diapers. I am also new to blogging, but not new to online discussions (I was part of a BBS discussion group back in the 1980’s and have tended since then to use email for much of my thoughts). For me, this blog affords the opportunity to re-engage with two of my favorite pastimes – (a) watching & thinking about movies, and (b) writing (& talking) about movies. This blog also affords me the opportunity to engage my brain in something creative apart from my job. And, I should add, I have found it wonderful to make connections with others. I do find, however, that blogging can be an obsession that demands to be given priority over other things – like doing my homework and cleaning the house, etc. As I get back into the demands of school, as I begin to take on the responsibility of a new baby, and as the reality of the rest of my life catches up with me, I will likely have to force myself to be a little less concerned with this blog – but still engaged. That’s life, and life is good. If you have actually read this far, I am appreciative. Have a great day.

kiss me deadly apocalypto


(yes, I shamelessly grabbed this promo image online)

>>>some personal thoughts – not reviewing<<<


So yesterday afternoon I snuck out of work and saw Apocalypto – finally! I found it rather good. Probably what I like most about the film, and what stuck me as soon as it finished, was that the film comes across as though it is going to be heavy handed and preachy (esp. with the Will Durant quote at the beginning and the hype surround it’s build up), but in fact it only leaves one wondering just what it is saying – in a good, thoughtful kind of way. I believe this would be a great group discussion film. There is a lot to think about, from issues of violence and cruelty to issues of internal societal corruption, from normative cultural stereotypes to universal themes of familial devotion, faith, and fear. I am not sure if I think it is a great film (probably not quite), but it is a good film in many respects, not least of which is its ability to tell an interesting story chiefly through images – you could get rid of the subtitles and still understand 95% of the tale. To me that is one of the signs of a good director.

Also, Rudy Youngblood as Jaguar Paw does a great job, as do much of the rest of this unknown cast. Maybe that is because Gibson is first an actor himself.

So then I get home, the rest of my family was to be out for the evening (to a baby shower – a non sequitur compared to my day), and I needed something to do. So I put in Kiss Me Deadly (1955) and sat down to watch with a plate of nachos. With full disclosure I admit I had not seen it before (I know, shame on me! And I call myself a fan of film noir!). At about an hour into the film I realized I needed some good scotch, in which I indulged (Oban, if you want to know), and that set off the film just perfectly. I have to say what a wholly wonderful film, and a great “chaser” after Apocalypto. That might sound strange, but it had a refreshing quality for me after the heaviness of the jungle story.

I was particularly struck by the image of the dangling legs of the character Christina Bailey (Cloris Leachman – wow, did the credits say introducing Cloris…?) as she is being tortured to death.



You hear her screams and see her legs shaking and that’s all – except for seeing the shoes of the two men. To me this is a haunting image and it comes only a few minutes into the film. At that point I knew I was watching something rather remarkable. Some other parts of the film are a bit dated – but I love those parts too – yet scenes like this have a timeless quality, if that’s the right word.

As I continued to watch the film I thought again of the quote by Will Durant: “A great civilization is not conquered from without until it has destroyed itself from within.” hhmmm

Finally, my uninventive conclusion is that it’s better late than never to see a good film. I know I will be seeing Kiss Me Deadly again.

>the newbie blogger’s New Year’s Resolutions

>

I really don’t think New Year’s Resolutions mean a whole lot, and they are mostly personal anyway. But in the spirit of blogging, and a giddy year-end state of mind, I will submit my list.

Spend more time with my family. We have a baby due in late January, so I will soon enter the no-sleep zone, but as far as I am concerned, that’s great with me. Of course, the no-sleep zone may mean more time to be up late writing my blog, or it may mean less (probably less).

Finish my MBA program. I should be done sometime in mid-2007. Of course, writing my thesis will conflict with writing my blog and, I have to say, the thesis will win out if push comes to shove. Of course, I still have my full-time job, so I’m asking God for two extra days to be created each week, just until the dust settles.

Watch more movies. What else can I say. Over the past few years I have not seen nearly as many films as I would like to. In my post watching movies at home I highlighted some of the challenges I face in trying to watch films at home (which is where I do most of my film watching these days), or even at all. So I figure I will never reach the number of films I did in my younger days, nonetheless, I will make a more concerted effort to fit in more films.

Write more. Blogging is rather new to me, so I’m still learning what it will mean for me, both in terms of content and overall commitment. However, I think it is a good thing to attempt to articulate one’s thoughts in writing. So, write more, and I should add, write better.

Finish my next script. I have been working for the past few years on film scripts as both a personal exercise and with a view to a possible future career. We’ll see how that goes. Along with this, I have a desire to take our little video camera and make some videos with my daughter (six going on seven) so she begins to understand more fully that movies are made and that she too can make them. Plus, I hope she will understand and appreciate movies better through the process.

Read some great film-related writing. I have David Bordwell’s The Way Hollywood Tells It on my list, as well as Jonathan Rosenbaum’s Movie wars: how Hollywood and the media conspire to limit what films we can see. I am looking for more suggestions – so let me know what you think I should be reading!

Oh yes, and these: exercise more, eat better, sleep more, spend more time with friends, stay on top of the bills, keep practicing my guitar and write more songs, teach my daughter to ride a bike, be more loving and romantic to my wife, get back into mountain climbing, learn to golf, etc. etc.

That’s all for now. HAPPY NEW YEAR y’all! Blessings all ’round!

>breath

>[okay… so, if you are going to check this blog on a semi-regular basis you will get the occasional poem from me. Poetry is an amateur project of mine and publishing, even if only on a blog, helps me to keep writing. Plus, to be a film lover is to be a lover of all good things, including poetry, as far as I’m concerned. enough already!]

In my hands a camera

Occam’s razor
against my skin

I search for precious things

your breath
unexpected friends
ephemera

my soul resonates
(music on the stereo)

I bend and twist
from still life to still life

pausing
leaping
holding
breathing

I see over the trees
hills shaking
turbulent yellow
in crushed velvet skies

like matches flaring
along frost covered canals
in the cold anticipation
of still breath mornings,

and these are
the moments of which I speak

these jeweled moments,
like boxes of photographs,
names written in fading ink
on the back of relatives
(standing in their own lights)

I see the old hand,
arm stretched across
the lower third,

rough round table
like a potter’s wheel
with cup and saucer.

I contemplate
the beauty of the arm,
relaxed,
the simple beauty
of light and glass,
the subtle beauty
of truth,

and the love of arms and tables
living in silver.

And in the choosing
there is a severing
a drawing of lines
a taking of sides

the distance of memories
and the presence of knowing
frozen in sun carved shadows

but nothing is like the real
the way this world
is handed to us

windows and icons
reality through lenses
a world circumscribed
so that we might dream
beyond the frame

I surface
through my life

angels lift me
devils push

my breath
light
short and shallow

my past, my future

a thin line
clipped with snapshots
gently tugging
at my cuffs

I float
oil on water
spreading thinner
and thinner

emulsion
barely revealing
a pale image
of a fragile earth

my eyes open
dark and still
like pools
under frail, slender skies

and I am thinking…

I’ll know you
by your eyes
the touch of your hand
your silhouette in the door
propping it open

and this is the world
wrapped around me

this is the revealing
of my breath
the photograph clutched
the heart enveloped in flesh

and the world is light

The wind gentle
in the leaves;
a portion of the tree
(blossom white mixed with green)
in the cracking window
framed and set apart

an idea
showing its torso

As I move
the tree shifts
(ideas shifting)
now another idea
now another
now the corner of the house
but still only a portion
in the shifting frame

Listening I hear
the song of the frame
sweet and bitter
like a tender heart
on the hi-fi

like teeth sharpened
on the day

and the difference
of silver and light
is the distance
from here to the door

>thinking & making & thinking

>Some unformed thoughts on the relationship between film criticism and film making, followed by a shameless plug.

Here’s the theory:
I am convinced it is good that those who think & write about films & filmmaking (including video/tv production) should also have some hand in actually doing the “making”; not in the specific film beings critiqued, but in the general process of filmmaking. My thought is this: Filmmaking is a complex craft, often collaborative and impossible to grasp all at once. The end product of filmmaking, the film, is also complex and impossible to grasp all at once. One has to focus on parts and try to related them to wholes. By dealing with the filmmaking process one may become more sensitive to the multiplicity of signifiers (to throw in a little semiotics) up there on the screen.

The interplay between the making and what is made is a fascinating topic, but that is not my point here. I believe that to be a good critic it may be helpful, not necessary but helpful, to have been a part of the process of solving the kinds of problems faced by filmmakers. I say not “not necessary” because any film under scrutiny must be taken as it is regardless of its means of production or even the intention of the filmmaker. The critic must attend to the film before her/him. However, production brings one closer the fact that filmmaking is a very human endeavor.

Unfortunately, I am unable to provide an example here of any “better than typical” criticism by someone who has also done significant production. So maybe my idea is bunk.

But I have to say production (film or video) is a hoot.

Now for my own shameless plug:
Years ago I used to make my living with film and television production. I have always wanted to get back into it, but for various reason have not.

Recently, however, I had the privilege of “tagging along” on the crew of a recent video production – I handled script continuity and took a number of production photos. The video is called All Sales Final and it was part of the 2006 National Film Challenge – The Premise: Participating teams have just one weekend to write, shoot and edit a short film or video. To make things interesting, each team is given a genre for its film, and a character, prop and line of dialogue that must appear in each team’s movie.

The National Film Challenge: http://www.filmchallenge.com/index.htm

You can see my production photos here:
http://picasaweb.google.com/cineboy65/AllSalesFinalFilmChallenge2006

All Sales Final

>R is for Rubik, F is for Fake

>For some reason I love this kind of thing…

Michel Gondry, filmmaker and music video director, known for such films as The Science of Sleep (2006) and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), recently made a video in which he deftly solves a Rubik’s Cube with his feet and posted it to YouTube. See Video 1:

Video 1

I really enjoy seeing filmmakers being a little weird of goofy in their “spare” time. I am not surprised the person who directed Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind would be able to solve a Rubik’s Cube with his feet.

And then someone noticed… (that someone being Scott Macaulay at Filmmaker http://www.filmmakermagazine.com/ magazine) and created a video response to Gondry’s video, and posted it on YouTube. See Video 2:

Video 2



I have to say that I love what Gondry has done even more. This is just pure fun. It’s great to see a feature filmmaker having fun. It also humorously highlights that fact that all filmmaking is a kind of illusion in one way or another.

How to begin an epic (nello stile di Visconti)

[Note: I am writing this rather long post as a personal exercise in narrative elucidation. If you find it interesting, then I am glad. If you decide to pass over it for better things, I am also glad. Life is too short!]

It is well known that Luchino Visconti was both an Aristocrat (Duke of Modrone) and a life-long communist. Having directed preter-neo-realist (Ossession) and classic neo-realist (La Terra trema) films, he also directed lavish films about the aristocratic class, such at Senso – for which he was criticized for having abandoned neo-realism (though it’s arguable he did not). Visconti was a man of contrasts and, at least from the outside, of contradictions. A highly cultured aristocrat and an avowed communist, his filmmaking was the ground on which he worked out these tensions, often to stunning effect.

How then might one, Visconti of course, criticize the class from which he came? He does so in his magnificent film The Leopard (1963), based on Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s novel of the same name. However, the criticism is done, not harshly, but lovingly and with great insight. The opening sequence, what I want to look closely at here, sets the stage for both the themes in the film and the method of articulation.

The opening shot of The Leopard begins as the backdrop for the opening titles. The film is a vast, sweeping portrayal of the Italian unification period (Risorgimento) of the 19th century, shot (stunningly by Giuseppe Rotunno) in Super Technirama (aspect ratio of 2.21:1), so it is interesting that the first shot has the camera stuck in the trees with the leaves hiding the view. (figure 1) [note: my screen grab for figure 1 is not exactly 2.21:1, but the rest are correct]

figure 1

But then the camera begins to move to the right to reveal a building in the distance, carefully framed by the branches, enveloped in green olive trees, and secured behind a wrought iron gate. (figure 2)

figure 2

The camera continues to move to the right, still with its focal point the building in the distance. When the camera comes to a stop the building, now visually framed by ancient carved stone pillars, is still viewed from behind the gate, and seemingly to be both emerging from and sinking into the vibrant green foliage of the surrounding olive trees and other plants. (figure 3)

figure 3

The wrought iron gate, with the estate securely ensconced behind it, connotes the similar kind of beginning one finds in Citizen Kane. The reference suggests that this story, for all its historical grandeur and Super Technirama visuals, is going to center around one singular, powerful figure who will fall, not really because of outside forces, but of internal corruption and self-delusions.

The next shot begins with a shot of the trees in the field. (figure 4)

figure 4

Then the camera moves in a sweeping motion up and to the right to reveal an ancient bust (statue) from some apparently glorious past age. (figure 5)

figure 5

Italy is a country of multiple glorious and inglorious pasts. Which means that it is also a country of change, even while things stay the same. The verdant and vibrant growth of the trees (something new and growing up from the earth) connotes the changes taking place at the foot of the statue. The statue, a majestic and dilapidated figure, beautiful and impotent, hovers pointlessly over the field. Yet, for how pointless it is, the statue still captures our attention, for the trees are mere trees, but this figure says something about where we (humanity) have come from, who we are, or are capable of having been. What then of this contrast? Certainly, if the contrast is a political contrast, it is a gentle and beautiful reference – something akin to a kind of sentimentally of a forever lost past.

The next shot also begins with the trees. (figure 6)

figure 6

And again the camera sweeps up and right, but this time instead of a statue we see the building again. (figure 7)

figure 7

Now the connection has been made more concretely between the old and new, the natural beauty of the new and the ancient beauty of a man-made past, an ancien régime. Should we see, then, that this building, this beautiful Italia villa as standing for a kind of impotency?

More to the point, and in keeping with what is obvious in the film, this dichotomy between and ordered and structured world on the one hand and a natural and wild world on the other, symbolically prefigures the clash between the established order and revolution. Architecturally the villa is, from a distance at least, simple and box-like. Its windows are uniformly spaced and it lines are clear. The olive orchard, on the other hand, juts up toward the villa like a crowd massing around a palace in protest. And yet, what is so interesting about this film, and Visconti in general, is the lack of any obvious animosity. The scene, the juxtaposition is beautiful, as is the entire film, including the battle of Pamplona with its stunningly beautiful representation of the hysterical brutality of war.

Visconti had the ability to tell stories of both beauty and ugliness. In this sense he saw political struggles to be like human beings: glorious and corrupt at the same time. For, although Visconti was an aristocrat and a communist, he was first and foremost a humanist with a deep empathy for human weakness.

As an American I have to admit a certain perspective. Born in a country born of revolution I have an affinity for the revolutionary thrust of the (Risorgimento. As a person somewhere between proletariat and petit-bourgeoisie I easily believe I can identity with the ruling class – especially if it is royalty. (Identifying with the struggles and desires of the aristocracy – especially that of western mythology – has always been a pastime of the middle class.) And, as a person from the “new world” I have a tendency toward romanticizing the “old world.” When I see the image of the villa I do not first see an image of the aristocratic class that must be, or has been, done away with. What I see is something like what Frances Mayes describes in here book Under a Tuscan Sun when she was contemplating buying the house Bramasole – a house that has a name no less!:

“On the other hand, a dignified house near a Roman road, an Etruscan (Etruscan!) wall looming at the top of the hillside, a Medici fortress in sight, a view toward Monte Amiata, a passageway underground, one hundred and seventeen olive trees, twenty plums, and still uncounted apricot, almond, apple, and pear trees. Several figs seem to thrive near the well. Beside the front steps there’s a large hazelnut. Then, proximity to one of the most superb towns I’ve ever seen. Wouldn’t we be crazy not to buy this lovely house call Bramasole?”

Wouldn’t everyone? Visconti’s villa is still a dreamy object of desire while representing an object (the ruling class) to overturn.

Visconti, I believe, has thus far given us clues to the nature of this story, yet he has done so in a subtle way such that one could easily be pulled in to the luscious grandeur of the ruling class, to see Prince Don Fabrizio Salina (played wonderfully by Burt Lancaster) as a good man, and to miss the fact that we have fallen for Visconti’s little trap. The prince is not a good man, but reviewers of The Leopard have pointed out Visconti’s empathy toward the prince; something not lost on Visconti’s critics who believed he had abandoned the precepts of neo-realism and its political foundations. But, of course, we have not yet seen this prince.

Not every shot from the opening sequence is discussed here, but it is clear that the villa is the centrally denoted object of the title sequence. Eventually the camera begins to dolly closer to the villa as though being drawing toward the building by an unseen force. Finally the camera is at the villa, no trees blocking our view. (figure 8)

figure 8

What is interesting from all these shots is the absence of any human beings. The story is not yet a story, rather, we have a kind of preamble of contrasts; a preparing for the contrasts between order and revolution that is to come.

This shot is also the first time that human activity (finally) begins to intrude into the scene. We hear voices, somewhat indistinct, reciting the rosary in Latin. The camera begins to track along the outside of the house, passing the curtained windows, until we arrive at this window and see the first person we’ve seen in the film; a kneeling, praying person. (figure 9)

figure 9

Wind blows the curtain which partially blocks our view of the room and those in it. Then we cut to the interior of the villa. (figure 10)

figure 10

Again the curtain partially blocks the room and its inhabitants until the camera pans slowly to the right to reveal a room full of people kneeling, praying the rosary in unison.Curtains have played interesting roles in film history, often signifying the limits of what is revealed and what cannot be revealed. [I remember as a child watching films at a local theater where a large red curtain opened to reveal the screen, signaling the begining of the film. That was always a momentous moment for me.] In this case the window curtain may function as a means by which the play begins, like a curtain rising in the theater. Or, it may act as a kind of ephemeral threshold over which we cross to enter the story. However, it is interesting to observe the fact that the curtain is being blown by the wind. The wind is a part of nature, like the trees in the orchard, and we (via the camera’s movements) enter the room on the wind, as it were. Here is a room full of the ruling class (interesting to those who know of Visconti’s aristocratic heritage and communist commitments), praying the rosary in Latin (a fact not lost on post Vatican II Italian audiences I’m sure), and we enter through a window (rather Brechtian if you ask me) on a revolutionary wind. To seal the thrust of this opening sequence, and to officially begin the story, the rosary is interrupted by the shouts of the estate’s workers who have found a body of a dead soldier in the orchard. Again, the wild world of the orchard competes with the established order of the villa.

This series of opening shots are, in my opinion, the work of a master filmmaker who knows where he is going and from where he has come. If we do not pay attention me might assume these opening shots are just functional establishing shots acting as a mere backdrop for the film’s credits. Instead, we get a vision of how one might invite a viewer into the grand world of a human-scaled epic.

watching movies at home

I have a family. My wife and I have some similarities in our movie preferences, and some real differences (no surprises among the married crowd). I have a six year old daughter who is not likely to, as yet, enjoy watching many of the films I find interesting. And, with a family (who I love more than all the films in the world), I don’t get out to the local theater as much as I might like, and when I do, it is usually with my family. So I find myself trying to eke out a few viewings of “my” movies at home in between family time, home projects, work, homework (‘cause I’m back in school again), downtime, and whatever else pulls at my time; all of which are good, even if I don’t always manage my time very well.

The process of watching movies at home goes something like this: when I feel I have some time I put “my” film into the dvd player, my daughter asks what I am watching, I pause the opening credits and explain it to her, then she settles down next to me as we begin watching the film, soon she begins asking questions like – what language is this? What are they talking about? What is that? etc. – I try to explain, frequently pausing the film, occasionally I read her the subtitles as we watch the film, I pause the film again when my wife asks a question from the computer room, I pause the film again to let the dog outside for a potty break, my daughter then plays with her Legos as I resume the film, occasionally my daughter (who is half-paying attention) asks a question about the film or wants to show me what she has created, the dog wants up on the couch (we have a pug, who can jump up himself, but insists that one of us lift him to the couch), my wife asks if I have paid a particular bill or called someone like I had promised, then, about half-way into the film it is time to put my daughter to bed, once that is done I am too tired to continue my film, so I go to bed. The next evening (or two, or three) I try to finish the film to much the same scenario. And please know that I am not complaining.

All this is affected by a bad habit I got into years ago when I worked at a video store where I could take home any film I wanted after work. During that time I watched the first third of many, many films, but never finished most of them. So now, I have to force myself to get beyond the moment of tension I begin to feel at about a third of the way into any film – that is, the feeling that the other films in the stack next to the tv might be worth a looking at. I am getting better at finishing films, though.

I like the comfort of watching films at home. I like having the kitchen nearby. I like being able to pause the film to take care of business. I also love my family and would generally rather spend time with them than with a movie. But, I have to say, seeing a film in a theater has great advantages. One of which is the unstoppable momentum of the film. Unless you leave the theater you will see the film with relatively few distractions. It is like going to school. You could study a subject on your own, but school adds a level of impetus that carries one along. My suggestion to those who have a deeply abiding interest in film, who are developing their own ideas about film, and who are single (or relatively so), is to take this opportunity see as many films as possible so as to develop a foundation of knowledge and experience while you can.

One final word: Recently I have seen some sections of some great films with my daughter, these include The Seventh Seal, La Terra Trema, The Bicycle Thief, and others. I read the subtitles out loud and she asks questions. We have had some great times, and I believe she is getting introduced to some great works of art (to go along with the history of great painting that her mother is teaching her). She recently told me that when she grows up she wants to live on a farm and write books.