Let’s talk about the feelings of this "Red Thin Line". In fact, not so much knowledge of the film is as a brand-new experience of watching movies. Everyone who has watched "2001 A Space Odyssey" knows that many people of insight after the release at that time They are desperately discussing the symbolic and political significance of the film, trying to force Kubrick into certain camps, but a teenager like the emperor who pointed out the nudity said to reporters: this film The movie is not to tell us anything, but to let us experience it. This "Red Thin Line" is exactly such a movie. When I watched this film, I wandered about the picture and the plot of the story many times, thinking about other issues that can be subconsciously stimulated and associated with it, and the film as a whole But back to the background, the function is like Jarman's blue screen. It was only when there was a very rhythmic battle scene that I was brought back to the movie again, but it was not that I was distracted by the film, but the free effect that the film intended to achieve. The director is expressing his own While we are emotional, we should not forget to leave space and atmosphere for our own thinking, so that both are in a state of experience. Doing spiritual intercourse in meditation is difficult to achieve in movies of this kind of state, and this effect is also available. What is undesirable is that this effect does not happen every time you see this film, which is different from Jarman's physiological hypnosis. "New World" failed to produce such an effect, but instead made me feel disgusted. I don't know why.
Physiological natural reflections cannot be controlled by consciousness. On the one hand, movies play a role in expressing thoughts and opinions, but often on the other hand, the shock-feelings that were brought to people at the beginning of the invention of the movie, as the movie gradually changes into The tools of expression have been forgotten by people, so poetry films and experiential films are even more scarce and precious for today's film industry.
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