barsoomcore said:
JD: Sorry to hear you didn't enjoy it. I AM being careful in how I recommend the film -- I think it's important to see, though I don't think that everyone will like it.
I should clarify... I didn't
not enjoy it, I just didn't enjoy it very much and I thought it was over-rated. I don't see it as innovative, unique or particularly noteworthy or important, except maybe that he's a big name and he may very well bring this type of style to a more mainstream audience.
barsoomcore said:
I don't think it depends on liking anime, or anything very Japonesque. I have liked some anime (Akira is very cool, as is the first twenty minutes of Ninja Scroll, and I think Miyazaki's a genius, stomp down), but there's tons of crappy anime, and I approach any new product with great trepidation.
No, and Roger Ebert liked it a lot, even though I doubt he's even seen
Fist of the North Star for instance, which
Kill Bill reminded me of strongly.
barsoomcore said:
Uma's performance. I know you thought it was wooden and stiff, but to me she succeeded in creating something simultaneously perposterous and realistic. I think there are moments in that film where she pulls off some incredibly precise transitions that in lesser hands would have flailed.
I should clarify again: many of the performances were wooden or stilted, however, her's typically were not. She (and Lucy Liu) did an admirable job or making a good performance out of an awkward screenplay.
barsoomcore said:
The lack of sympathy or identification with any of the characters. None of these people are likeable -- they're not even believable. These people don't live in our world, and I don't think for a second that QT is pretending they do (katana on airplanes, for example). Contrary to popular thought, I don't think that sympathetic characters or characters one can identify with are important parts of story-telling -- I think they're crutches bad story-tellers fall back on because they don't know any other way to engage their audience.
Perhaps. After all, even Stephen R. Donaldson has a fairly large following with the most unlikeable protagonist I've ever seen. To me, though, the movie would have been much better
had the characters been somehow more engaging in some way or another. And even if I had really liked the movie, I think it would have been even better for engaging characters.
barsoomcore said:
I loved the hard-core, balls-to-the-walls attitude of the film. Nothing was too shocking, nothing was held back. It was fun to see just how far he was going to go -- pretty far, it turns out. It made the story more gripping for me because I knew ANYTHING could happen.
Apparently the new Texas Chainsaw Massacre has that same attitude. And maybe it's because I was prepped, but I actually didn't find the violence to be all that shocking. It was way too cartoony, way to anime, for me to take it seriously and be shocked by arm removals, feet flying through the air unattached to legs,
or any of that. If the violence had been even a little bit realistic in terms of the the effects on the characters, it might have been shocking.
barsoomcore said:
Finally, I thought it created a world that was complete in itself. Not realistic, but absolutely convincing in its details. That for me is the ultimate task of a film director. All cinema takes place in an imaginary landscape that exists only in the union of the mind of the director and the mind of the audience. Mediocre directors think they have to reproduce "reality" in order to be convincing. Great directors create their own reality and bring it to the screen with such razor-sharp focus that their audiences are sucked right in and never even notice.
Pretentious? Me?

I'll grant, QT did create a purposefully unrealistic movie and made the audience (at least some of them) accept it without a problem. Then again, so do most action movie directors. So much so, in fact, that movies that go out of their way to be realistic, such as
The Hunted or
S.W.A.T. are particularly noteworthy, and come across as radical stylistic expressions of the genre.