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Showing posts from April, 2021

I need setting to change to feed my low attention span

 This week we watched the movie Daughters of the Dust  for class. I would first like to say that generally I liked the concept of the movie. I liked the way that nature almost played its own character in the film, and a lot of the sounds and shots added great context and flavor to the plot. However I found myself feeling bored almost the entire movie, and towards the end I realized that it was because the setting never really changed. I have grown so accustomed to seeing screens with rapidly changing color schemes and movies that change setting almost every scene that when I sit down to watch a movie like this, where the setting never changing is imperative to the story, I cannot do it. My attention span is to low. I need to see more. This got me thinking onto the future of what we call film. How much will movies that we love so much today be abke to be appreciated by people in the future. The average attention span is growing lower every year. And with growing popularity among social

Trunh Minh ha's music video

I had no idea what I was getting into when I started  Reassemblage. I expected an old fashioned traditional documentary, but what I got was an experimental film that stretched the boundaries of my perspective on film. Within a few minutes of watching the movie I began to understand the strong experimental vibe of the movie, so I began to process it not as a movie (waiting for a plot to unfold or some form of character development), but as an youtube video that came up on my feed. My mind was open, and I was very surprised by the impact this film had. The spaces between the sound, and poetic narration made me think of this film as a sort of music video. All of the sounds put together formed an ambient jarring and moving piece of music, and the images of the environment being described added to the emotional value of the music much more than any music video I had ever seen. I think Trinh Minh ha's Reassemblage  was a beautiful attempt communicating the emotion and feeling of Africa a

Why is Psycho the only 20th century horror movie I like?

About 8 years ago I saw the Conjuring in theaters. It was the first time I had ever sat down and watched a horror movie from start to finish, and I was hooked. After the conjuring I spent the next few years scrounging the internet for all sorts of horror movies trying to find one that really really scared me. Since I discovered my love for horror movies, I have found many movies that I thought were good and/or scary, however I still have not found that bone-chilling nightmare inducing horror that some people report experiencing after seeing any mediocre horror movie. A couple years ago my mom was talking to me about the horror movies I watch and asked me If I had seen any of the horror movies she grew up with (The Exorcist, The Omen, Poltergeist, Psycho). Of course I had no interest in watching old people movies so my answer was no. But the conversation got me curious and eventually I found myself watching all four of these films within the next couple of days. I found The Exorcist, Th