Slow Film


- crazychristina
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Sat Nov 13, 2010 1:17 am
Slow Film
Both my sister and my daughter claimed LTROI is VERY SLOW, in fact my daughter gave up after half an hour, having nearly fallen asleep. She said that that probably wasn't a problem for me because I had read the book and knew what was going to happen, so I guess she just got frustrated waiting to find out what was happening.
- a_contemplative_life
- Moderator
- Posts: 5905
- Joined: Sat Aug 15, 2009 2:06 am
- Location: Virginia, USA
Re: Slow Film
What!?
I never thought it was slow. I found it quite engrossing really. Oh well, different people, different perspectives.
I never thought it was slow. I found it quite engrossing really. Oh well, different people, different perspectives.
Death changes everything, sweeps everything away. Even mistakes.
- crazychristina
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Sat Nov 13, 2010 1:17 am
Re: Slow Film
I certainly didn't find it slow, and I don't think that's because I had read the book. Patience is my main virtue.
-
DMt.
Re: Slow Film
Well, many people fear and hate silence, and there's a lot of it in the film.
I loved that it expected you to have a longer-than-soundbite attention span. They respected the viewer enough to expect that, I think.
I loved that it expected you to have a longer-than-soundbite attention span. They respected the viewer enough to expect that, I think.
- Dragonclaws
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Sat Feb 05, 2011 11:26 pm
- Location: Seattle, Washington, U.S.
- Contact:
Re: Slow Film
I like slow movies. Well, if it's got high-quality content, anyway. Spirited Away, The Shining, Heathers... It's a matter of taste.
"The human body can be drained of blood in 8.6 seconds given adequate vacuuming systems." --River, Firefly
Re: Slow Film
Have the same reaction with my family...
...and they all thought Oskar is the new Hakan.
Maybe I should've spoiled a few plot points, it might extend their patience
...and they all thought Oskar is the new Hakan.
Maybe I should've spoiled a few plot points, it might extend their patience
"YOU'RE GONNA CARRY THAT WEIGHT."
Re: Slow Film
Half an hour in is about the spot when I thought that it was a quite boring movie and considered to direct my attention elsewhere.crazychristina wrote:Both my sister and my daughter claimed LTROI is VERY SLOW, in fact my daughter gave up after half an hour, having nearly fallen asleep.
I think it was something with the cinematography that made me stay.
In retrospect I can say that the boring part was worth it and I didn't think it was slow at all on the second viewing but this is probably because I by then knew the significance of the actions in the slow start.
"He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche
Re: Slow Film
Funny how different people perceive what is boring.
I think society and the media keeps many people in an over-stimulated state.
Take that away, and they experience some sort of sensory deprivation = boredom.
For me, gun fights and car chases are extremely boring and ridiculous.
As for LTROI, I was riveted from the first snow to the last.
I think society and the media keeps many people in an over-stimulated state.
Take that away, and they experience some sort of sensory deprivation = boredom.
For me, gun fights and car chases are extremely boring and ridiculous.
As for LTROI, I was riveted from the first snow to the last.
Re: Slow Film
The problem is, we are fanatics
We rave and go gaga over this film to friends and families
And when the time comes that they watch/read the film/book, they have this unexpectedly high expectations(which shouldnt come as a surprise, seeing as we raised the bar high up ourselves)
This is why I don't tell people to watch/read/listen/do anything that I'm excited about, because their expectations will be different depending on how they were made aware of the move/book/music/activity
If there's one thing I learned from my parents, is that people get more satisfaction out of something if they discovered it themselves
My parents never told me to listen to the albums they've loved, or the movies they liked, or the books they poured their brains over.
I just picked out the cassette tapes, the LDs, and books they owned, and gave em a try, with no prodding from anyone
And here I am, 25 years old, and listening to music and reading books that they loved back then, and still love now
We rave and go gaga over this film to friends and families
And when the time comes that they watch/read the film/book, they have this unexpectedly high expectations(which shouldnt come as a surprise, seeing as we raised the bar high up ourselves)
This is why I don't tell people to watch/read/listen/do anything that I'm excited about, because their expectations will be different depending on how they were made aware of the move/book/music/activity
If there's one thing I learned from my parents, is that people get more satisfaction out of something if they discovered it themselves
My parents never told me to listen to the albums they've loved, or the movies they liked, or the books they poured their brains over.
I just picked out the cassette tapes, the LDs, and books they owned, and gave em a try, with no prodding from anyone
And here I am, 25 years old, and listening to music and reading books that they loved back then, and still love now
... she looks like a kid who has just been overindulgent with chocolate cake or a messy candy bar...
I could just picture Arnold planting a bloody kiss on Oskar telling him "I'll be back."
