Quote From: kimikomineWhat is it that you find enjoyable about watching someone get stabbed, ran over by a car, paralyzed, etc? What does that feed in you? I have heard it is for the daredevils that like to feel they ousted death or escaped...when we watch a movie about a couple and love, is that love perceived as fake? just because it is done by actors? or is it something that we connect with and can relate to? I think the same goes for those that like to watch horror movies. They like to see someone getting hurt, mutiliated, abused. I just don't see any thrill in it. I guess its good I am not a movie critic . lol
When I happen to come to a movie, watching it, etc. and I know there is going to be something horrible coming up, I turn the station. even my unconscious mind does not approve of this. I guess it takes all kinds. :)
I like it because it's exictment. It's an escape from the real world. It gives me a moment to think "what would I do in this situation?" "How scary would that be in real life?" or even "Damn...that's not even physically possible." But there are some things that just satisfy me in the movies when they happen, because I know that they won't ever happen in real life, and if they did, I know I wouldn't be so happy about them as I am when I watch the movie. Like in the re-make of House of Wax (horrible re-make by the way...Vincent Price would shoot himself if he weren't already dead) when Paris Hilton get's stabbed through the head with a pole. Who doesn't want to see Paris Hilton get what she deserves? I'm not saying she actually deserves to be run through the head with a pole, that's one of those things that I wouldn't be so satisfied about considering how really terrible that would be for her family, but in the movie it happens, and I can feel okay about it knowing that it didn't really happen, and she's still alive and okay. ....on a side note...I would have been just as satisfied if she had actually served her time in jail like she was supposed to...
And like I said, draw a line between real and fake. Even with love movies. Like Atonement for example. Natalie Portman and James McCavoy. They are supposed to be in love, and want to be together more than anything in the world. They portray that on the screen very well, as they are both great actors.
But in real life, James McCavoy is married, and not to Natalie Portman, so yes, there is an element of fakeness in the film.
Or when I was in high school, I was in a play that involved my character kissing another at the end. Fortunately, my boyfriend landed the character that I was supposed to kiss. But what if he hadn't? By your logic, my kissing another person would have to be real for it to be believable, because it was supposed to portray love. Essentially, I would have to cheat on my boyfriend for the sake of the play, as James McCavoy would have to cheat on his wife. Once again, real and fake here.
It's mimicking something that could be real, but it's not actually happening. We can all relate to what we see in films sometimes, mark I said SOMETIMES before you go asking me "What part of violence can you relate to, you sick twisted person that I'm making assumptions about?" that's the point of theatre, the point of acting. BUT not all of it can be related to by EVERYONE. And still, movies are not real. That's what we learn when we are younger, that movies are not real. They are fun to watch, fun to enjoy, but they are not real. I'm going to reiterate myself, considering I don't really feel like anyone is listening when I say it, line between real and fake people. Fantasy and reality. Don't scew those lines.