Sheriff Chambers wrote:I'm inclined to disagree with defenders of the film (here and elsewhere). I genuninley think it's a silly fantasy film for boys and I'm surprised that it's found so much support. Just my opinion on having seen the film - I'm sorry if I've upset anyone. Am I so out of step with contemporary tastes?
No one is upset about you being "out of step with contemporary taste." Earlier posters in this thread have commented on the things they didn't like in this film with grace and intelligence; what they DIDN'T do is attack the audience of the film, following the Jonathan Rosenbaum school of criticism, where the critic figures out "who the film is for" and then denounces the film for that reason alone. Mfunk even took note of all the people on here who DID like the movie, and struggled to figure out why; he showed us some respect while never changing his tone or opinion.
Almost all of the statements in your original post fall into two categories:
1) Stupefied wondering about who could possibly like this film,
and
2) Assumptions about what Nolan's motivations were, but this wasn't even specific to the film but rather whether Nolan thought he was "making a valuable contribution to film culture." That's nothing more than a way to criticize the filmmaker without actually discussing the merits of the movie.
In both cases you focused on the people around the movie (those who tend to be fond of it) and not on the movie at all. Even your response about "contemporary tastes" is an attempt to discuss things OTHER than the movie. No one here cares about contemporary tastes. I, like many others, was surprised to find that I liked this film, when I generally don't like Nolan. The only things you actually said
about Inception were that it was "a terrible muddle" and an "ordinary action film."
Hate this movie, man. You have permission. But don't talk down to those who like it, don't act incredulous when others like it, don't criticize the movie for the age/sex/location of its viewers, don't assume you know whether the filmmaker is a gasbag or not, and don't get butthurt when people call you out for contributing nothing.
edit: I just went back to re-read this:
Sheriff Chambers wrote:If the film does have a place in contemporary film culture it's probably one that is concerned with the function of films of this type (why are theses films so successful etc.?, which I do think is interesting) rather than the 'text' of the film itself.
which is an admission of your lack of concern with the film at all. You seem to have skipped over that part of the conversation altogether, and are more interested in some "cultural" analysis that says "oh dear, oh my, why
do these plebieans like such a thing?" as if you were watching us cheer on two gladiators murdering each other or something.