by Volcanic21 » Fri 16 May 2008, 05:08:16
Yeah, Requiem for a Dream is an amazing movie, but I find it more numbing than sad. In that, after it's over, I don't cry, but I do sit in the dark staring into space for at least five minutes. The first time I saw it, everyone in the theater did that, it was pretty surreal.
I don't know if anyone's ever seen "American Movie," but it's tied for my favorite movie of all time. It's a documentary about the American Dream, kind of. Sometimes when I watch it, it makes me happy, because there is a lot of real beauty in the people and the relationships in it, and it's also hysterically funny, but most of the time it just crushes me, seeing how futile and wasted this guy's life is. Either way, it's an incredible film, and I recommend it to anyone and everyone, as most people have never seen it, much less heard of it. Real quick, some kick-ass quotes from the movie:
"Kick fuckin' ass, I got a Mastercard!"
"Last night, man, I was so drunk, I was calling Morocco, man. Calling, trying to get to the Hotel Hilton at Tangiers in Casablanca, man. That's, I mean, that's, that's pathetic, man! Is that what you wanna do with your life? Suck down peppermint schnapps and try to call Morocco at two in the morning? That's senseless! But that's what happens, man."
"I was called to the bathroom at the cemetery to take care of something. I walked in the bathroom, and in the middle toilet right there... somebody didn't shit in the toilet, somebody shat on the toilet. They shat on the wall, they shat on the floor. I had to clean it up, man, but before that, for about 10 to 15 seconds man, I just stared at somebody's shit, man. To be totally honest with you, man, it was a really, really profound moment. Cuz I was thinkin', "I'm 30 years old, and in about 10 seconds I gotta start cleaning up somebody else's shit, man.""
My other favorite movie, which is super sad every time I watch it, is "Koyaanisqatsi." For those who haven't seen it, it's basically an hour and a half long instrumental music video that goes through the entire history of the Earth, with a strong focus on man's impact on it. The music is by Philip Glass, and is pretty sweet, and the cinematography is outta control. I have watched this movie so many times, and every time it makes me think and feel different things. As for the sadness aspect, there are two scenes that really break the heart. One is where you see this trembling, withered human hand rise out of a row of hospital beds. There's something about it that tears me up, it's one of the most powerful images I've ever seen. The other is the final shot of the movie, which is a rocket blasting off into space, then exploding and slowly falling, on fire, down to earth. I look at that scene through the lens of peak oil, as a metaphor for man's meteoric rise to our current petroleum-based heights and our subsequent fiery crash back down to whatever comes next, if anything. The overall feeling of the movie, though, is very sad for me, as it shows how unsustainable, empty, impersonal, absurd, and ugly civilization has become.
Anyways, those are two movies that to a Peak Oil person should be very sad, at least they are to me, and I can't recommend them enough, as they are both phenomenal films.