Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Grand Canyon Essays - Quake, English-language Films, Films
Grand Canyon The movie "Grand Canyon" encompasses many thoughts and feelings. The movie consist of many characters, whose lives run in parallel, and often touch each other, resulting in some unexcepted events and relationships. The encompassing theme of the movies is that life, and the people who live those lives, finds a way to over come adversity. The adversity comes in the form of unexpected and unmeaning violence. We see the characters' lives suddenly punctuated by events over which they have no control, and which are at random. Yet their lives, although temporarily thrown off course, maintain themselves and sometimes become enriched. The helplessness of the human condition is made even more stark by man's relationship to his environment. This is exemplified by The Grand Canyon, which inspires awe of one character in particular, and which, at the end of the movie, provides the back drop for the closing scenes of disparate people coming together. The movie also has other themes resonate as under currents to the central themes sketched above. The separate universes of the urban poor and suburban wealthy are contrasted. These universes occupy the same time and space, but rarely touch, except for moments of threading violence and pitiful ignorance. These images occupy the opening scenes of the movie. The street basketball, played by impoverished, inner city adolescence and adults, shows the poverty of generations trapped in a way of life. An old man looks on through the chain link fence at the basketball court, illustrating that despair is all that one generation offer the next. These scenes are shot in black and white, devoid of color of life. These scenes are contrasted with the colorful shots of the professional basketball game, with cheering, affluent, predominantly white crowd, and an arena full of commercial interest and money. The game is the same, but the universes that they are played in are unimagined to each other. A second sub theme of the movie is the disappointment of human relationship, but how they are given new hope by new relationships. We see the faltering marriage of Mack and Claire. The drifting of Otis from his family to the street gangs. The failed attempt of Mack to initiate and adulterous affair with Lisa. These failing relationships are contrasted with the joy of the new relationship between Claire and her adopted baby, Simon and Jane, and Roberto with his new girlfriend. These are limits of Lisa new relationship with a police officer. And Simon announces his love for Jane. A some relationship fade, others are kindled. Violence is an overreaching theme in the movie. Every character suffers from a violent episode, over which he or she has no control. The violence is of the very ordinary kind that happens many times in the city. The violence is not always man's making. A mild earth quake is enough to induce a heart attack in one of the peripheral characters. The heart attack, like the earth quake itself, is unexpected and not dramatic. The earth quake also ties in with the theme of man's diminutive importance to nature, and the world as a whole, as it has existed for millions of years before mankind. The Grand Canyon cares nothing for the trials and tribulations of the human race, or individuals who make up that race. Overall, this movie fails to deliver all that it promises. It does not make me think and consider its contents, but then a good book would have done that much more effectively. The movie is too long and eventually lost my interest. The producers failed to convince me that they had anything meaningful to say. Instead, they were content to hint at shades of meaning. I would recommend the movie, but not to be taken as seriously as it would like to be.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.