[HN Gopher] The Big Sleep: The most baffling film ever made?
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The Big Sleep: The most baffling film ever made?
 
Author : DrNuke
Score  : 83 points
Date   : 2021-08-17 08:04 UTC (1 days ago)
 
web link (www.bbc.com)
w3m dump (www.bbc.com)
 
| jbgreer wrote:
| I'm a big fan of 'The Big Sleep', Kubrick & Lynch. I also enjoy
| nonfiction literature that dumps you in the middle of the story.
| I find encountering unfamiliar words, characters, etc.
| interesting, and the extra work to figure out the context is
| satisfying. My wife, on the other hand, hates that sort of thing,
| such that I recognize there are works I cannot recommend to her,
| or movies we can only watch with my finger on a pause button,
| ready to explain. She's not dumb, but she certainly has less
| appreciation or patience to put up with that sort of thing.
 
| version_five wrote:
| One thing I'd add to the article is that a key feature of the
| Marlow novels is their meandering plots. I read once that Raymond
| Chandler stories are about the journey, not the destination, so
| basically you're following Marlow around as he does stuff (that
| is mentioned in the article). The stuff he does is locally
| interesting, and it makes the stories good. But judging the
| stories based on their plot synopsis doesn't really get you
| anywhere. I've read all the Marlow novels, a while ago now, but
| I'd be challenged to give a decent summary of any of them. Its
| about the individual scenes.
 
  | smackeyacky wrote:
  | This is very much my experience of those novels. Not quite as
  | opaque as Conrad's "Heart of darkness" but I get the idea that
  | you are supposed to be as much in the dark about what is
  | happening to Marlowe as Marlowe is himself. It helps with the
  | immersion.
 
  | twelvechairs wrote:
  | TV has shifted this way, where its now common to have long
  | running series where different writers, directors, etc. across
  | every episode. Everything is logical in its immediate context
  | but can seem illogical in the broader context of the entire
  | series/show.
 
    | mixmastamyk wrote:
    | Yes, lots of characters change at random, just when you think
    | you know them.
 
| blowski wrote:
| Was it really that baffling? As a genre, film noir tends to have
| a twisting storyline and this was a particularly good one. But
| compared to, say, a Christopher Nolan or Charlie Kaufman film,
| this was a walk in the park.
 
  | tclancy wrote:
  | Same, but have you read the book? I really like Chandler and
  | have read it a number of times so I feel like there's a leg up.
  | For instance, the Sean Reagan character doesn't really exist in
  | the movie and barely registers when I watch it whereas his
  | story is perhaps the biggest thing in the book.
 
  | chippy wrote:
  | Now realise that, compared to movies from the last generation,
  | its the bafflement is the actual story, not the twists and
  | turns. In other words, 40 years ago, this news article would
  | bizarre! Everyone who saw the film would have grokked the way
  | the movie was told.
  | 
  | Its like the amazing difference between medieval and modern art
  | works is the difference in how metaphor and meaning is
  | represented rather than the actual story represented. However
  | some might say that it's the story that counts and thats whats
  | interesting.
  | 
  | To be a cultural historian today must be very frustrating.
 
  | monkeyfacebag wrote:
  | Do Christopher Nolan films have a reputation for being
  | baffling? I've never had that experience with them.
  | 
  | On the other hand, we just saw The Green Knight and that one
  | will throw you.
 
    | lotsofpulp wrote:
    | They are certainly baffling without subtitles since the
    | speech is not audible.
 
    | handrous wrote:
    | > On the other hand, we just saw The Green Knight and that
    | one will throw you.
    | 
    | I think I'm going to need at least two more viewings to get
    | from "OK, I see it saying a _lot_ of things about several
    | themes or ideas, and I can tell what at least some of those
    | themes or ideas are, but I have only the vaguest idea _what_
    | it 's saying about them" to "ah, now I get it."
    | 
    | Great movie.
 
  | leephillips wrote:
  | I love it and have seen it several times, but I still don't
  | know what's going on. I believe you, though, because my
  | girlfriend in college tried to explain it to a friend and me
  | after we had all watched it. She had been able to follow it,
  | but we were lost.
 
| BatFastard wrote:
| Primer has got to be the most baffling movie ever made,
| impossible to keep track of the timelines! Still an awesome
| movie!
 
| Causality1 wrote:
| _arguing that we should embrace ambiguity._
| 
| This is probably my most despised media trend of the 21st
| century, and that's saying something.
| 
| "You decide how it ended"
| 
| "You decide if she lived or died"
| 
| "Their motivations for doing that are up to you"
| 
| "It means whatever you want it to mean"
| 
| It's an excuse for lazy writing and for being too cowardly to
| make decisions.
 
  | chowells wrote:
  | Exactly none of those are what ambiguity means. Ambiguity means
  | that there are multiple resolutions that fit the existing
  | evidence equally well.
  | 
  | That doesn't mean you get to decide. Ambiguity isn't choose
  | your own adventure. You aren't having agency assigned to you in
  | order to be the ultimate arbiter.
  | 
  | Ambiguity is the opposite. You are having agency withheld and
  | being told by the author that you don't get to know.
  | 
  | It's an exercise in accepting that some things are unknowable
  | and a challenge to you to find enjoyment in the story despite
  | that.
  | 
  | Maybe you fail at that challenge. That's ok. Some people demand
  | their art be unlike life, in that everything is always fully
  | explained. But some people enjoy the construction, the ride,
  | and the occasional recollection and reconsideration as time
  | goes on. Ambiguous art is for for them.
  | 
  | But it's not a choose your own adventure story for anyone.
 
    | ghaff wrote:
    | It depends on the film. Without getting into a long rambling
    | film analysis, there are certainly films (Inception is
    | probably one), for example, in which the ending really is
    | ambiguous and those assert otherwise are probably looking a
    | little too deeply into discerning patterns in the tea leaves.
    | There are others (probably including Total Recall) where
    | there is a logical argument to be made as to why the film
    | actually ended in a particular way.
 
  | nimih wrote:
  | Ah yes, the famously lazy and cowardly filmmakers Stanley
  | Kubrick and David Lynch.
 
    | ratww wrote:
    | I don't think those two are a good example of the trend.
    | Especially Lynch. While he leaves a lot of small details for
    | interpretation, he does it from the beginning and doesn't ask
    | the viewers to decide between a story-changing yes/no answer
    | like Inception. It's like Hitchcock's McGuffin: would be fun
    | to know but it doesn't detract from the story.
    | 
    | Even Twin Peaks second season famous cliffhanger leaves no
    | doubt about what happened to Bob and Agent Cooper.
 
      | nimih wrote:
      | Admittedly, Kubrick is the better example here than Lynch:
      | 2001 is a stellar example of both "Their motivations for
      | doing that are up to you" (w/r/t HAL's behavior) and "It
      | means whatever you want it to mean" (Kubrick quite famously
      | refused to provide any sort of guidance whatsoever as to
      | how it should be interpreted)
      | 
      | For Lynch, Mulholland Drive was on my mind--probably since
      | it was mentioned in the article--as the ending (and,
      | honestly, the narrative structure as a whole) requires the
      | viewer to bring quite a lot of assuming and surmising to
      | the table in order to arrive at something coherent. Perhaps
      | the OP meant to purposefully exclude explicitly surreal and
      | abstract works from their critique, but that's certainly
      | not the tone I got from their post.
      | 
      | Perhaps a better counter example could've been Kelly
      | Reichardt's filmography, as she is also quite clearly a
      | meticulous and thoughtful filmmaker (I remember hearing a
      | profile of her on some NPR show a number of years ago that
      | talked about the amount of time she spent getting even the
      | ambient bird songs in Certain Women accurate, or reading
      | her comments about how she would've filmed First Cow in a
      | different aspect ratio if she had known COVID was going to
      | keep it from being widely seen in theaters), but typically
      | cuts off the narrative abruptly, leaving plenty of loose
      | ends dangling: Meek's Cutoff and First Cow are probably the
      | best examples.
      | 
      | As an aside, I feel like the point of Nolan leaving the
      | ending of Inception with an open-ended yes-no question is
      | intended to highlight that, from the character's
      | perspective, the answer no longer matters. I dislike the
      | film for other reasons, and don't particularly like Nolan's
      | screenplays in general, but that particular choice seems
      | pretty reasonable in the broader narrative context of the
      | film.
 
    | dang wrote:
    | Please don't post snarky comments or shallow dismissals. If
    | you know more than other people, that's great, but then
    | please share some of what you know so the rest of us can
    | learn. That's more in the intended spirit of this site.
    | 
    | https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
    | 
    | https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&sor.
    | ..
    | 
    | (Btw - re Lynch - I watched Blue Velvet after many years and
    | was surprised at how satisfyingly the plot _did_ line up. I
    | 'm not saying that's true of his other work. But I had had
    | the impression that BV was in the fashionably-ambiguous style
    | and when I saw it again I realized I must have just gotten it
    | wrong the first time.)
 
  | stuart78 wrote:
  | Like any other technique, leaving on a question can be a poor
  | substitute for a more fitting ending, but when done properly it
  | can reinforce a core theme within the work.
  | 
  | I am not a huge Inception fan, but I do think the cut at the
  | end is an important part of the movie and a good example of
  | effective ambiguity. It might scratch an itch to show the top
  | falling of hold longer (to confirm he is in a dream), but what
  | value comes from that resolution? Ending the film before the
  | answer allows us to think about what we've seen earlier to try
  | and answer it for ourselves. Even though the movie is over, the
  | audience is left with a part to play as they leave the theater.
 
  | ubermonkey wrote:
  | This is a deeply predictable (and pedestrian) take, and I 100%
  | expected to see it here (as I expect to see it in any technical
  | forum).
  | 
  | Highly technical people -- developers, engineers, etc -- are
  | much more likely (at least in my experience) to react
  | negatively to nonlinear storytelling. Further, the reaction is
  | almost never "wow, not for me" but instead "THIS IS STUPID".
  | 
  | It's essentially the equivalent of walking through, say, a
  | Mondrian exhibit and spouting "my kid can do that."
  | 
  | I do not know why this correlation exists. I could make
  | guesses, tying the exacting nature of programming with an
  | attraction to well-defined and explicit storytelling, but it is
  | what it is.
  | 
  | THE BIG SLEEP is awesome. MULHOLLAND DRIVE is a tremendous (and
  | award-winning) film. Ambiguity and vagueness are integral to
  | art (and life!).
  | 
  | Years ago, I saw a play by Maria Irene Fornes called THE
  | DANUBE. It's a bizarre, baffling, and beautiful piece, and you
  | cannot really approach it like you would (say) a Marvel film
  | expecting a traditional narrative. That's not what it's FOR.
  | It's an experience. You have to let go of the desire to tick
  | off plot points and characters like players in a football
  | program and just experience the art on its own terms.
  | 
  | Creating something that includes, or even hinges on, ambiguity
  | is challenging in the extreme. It's like when jazz musicians
  | break the "rules" of music and melody; you can only break the
  | rules and have it work when you have really mastered the
  | underlying craft.
  | 
  | Exploring these kinds of challenging works can be incredibly
  | rewarding. I encourage anyone reading this to do so. I long ago
  | decided that if I only ever saw plays/read books/watched movies
  | that I liked, I wasn't branching out enough. Find things that
  | challenge you, and engage them on their own terms. Figure out
  | why (for example) a host of professional movie critics loved
  | Lynch's film when it left you cold and maybe even angry. What
  | do they see that you don't?
 
    | thom wrote:
    | It's true! I awake each morning, enraged at the lack of
    | rigour in my dreams. I turn to my wife to tell her I found it
    | hard to suspend my disbelief. She transforms into a crab.
    | Every night it gets worse.
 
    | legerdemain wrote:
    | You must be one of those art snobs that liked Last Year at
    | Marienbad!
 
    | Causality1 wrote:
    | There's a difference between ambiguity that's integrated into
    | a story and ambiguity that's forced on the viewer. If the
    | only thing that makes the movie ambiguous is that the final
    | shot of the film isn't five minutes longer, then that is the
    | type of film I hate. All Is Lost, The Grey, Save Yourselves,
    | etc. If it's woven into the story from the beginning then I
    | have no issue with it even if it may not be for me.
 
    | yupper32 wrote:
    | I really dislike this take.
    | 
    | Listen, it's fine if people enjoy nonlinear storytelling to
    | make it an "experience" or a canvas with a few straight lines
    | painted on it. But it _is_ stupid, to follow your quote.
    | 
    | If you're using devices to make a story more difficult to
    | follow, just for the sake of making it more difficult to
    | follow for the "challenge", then that's stupid. I'm not
    | claiming The Big Sleep is even in this category, because I
    | haven't seen it, but plenty of films and books are.
    | 
    | If a canvas painted a solid color or with a few straight
    | lines sells for millions, then that's stupid.
    | 
    | People enjoy "stupid" things all the time, and that's fine.
    | There's nothing really wrong with that.
    | 
    | But the important part of my point is: only artists seem to
    | think they're above it.
 
      | nl wrote:
      | > Listen, it's fine if people enjoy nonlinear storytelling
      | to make it an "experience" or a canvas with a few straight
      | lines painted on it. But it is stupid, to follow your
      | quote.
      | 
      | Why?
      | 
      | Mondrian painting are the most beautiful, calming pieces of
      | art I know of (just look at Composition C (No. III) with
      | Red, Yellow and Blue)
      | 
      | > If you're using devices to make a story more difficult to
      | follow, just for the sake of making it more difficult to
      | follow for the "challenge", then that's stupid.
      | 
      | Why?
      | 
      | Other things use devices to make them more challenging, and
      | this is generally accepted as entertaining. Think harder
      | levels in video games, rules in sports and games etc.
      | 
      | Why should stories be any different?
      | 
      | And it should be noted there are different levels to this.
      | For example, Shakespeare tells one story on the surface,
      | but if that is all you understand then you miss the glory
      | of Shakespeare: his use of literary devices to tell other,
      | hidden stories underneath what you think you are reading.
      | 
      | You seem to be using the word "stupid" to mean something
      | like "non-obvious". That isn't what "stupid" means.
 
      | BoiledCabbage wrote:
      | > If you're using devices to make a story more difficult to
      | follow, just for the sake of making it more difficult to
      | follow for the "challenge", then that's stupid.
      | 
      | I don't know you, and even I know you disagree with your
      | own statement. If not, the only thing you'd enjoy are media
      | targeted at pre-schoolers and young children.
      | 
      | Anything targeting and age beyond that is made more
      | difficult to follow, by design to make it more challenging
      | than what a young child can grasp. That allowed the creator
      | to explore deeper subjects.
      | 
      | Maybe you don't like things more challenging than your
      | comfort zone, maybe you don't like more less linear
      | depictions but do like them somewhat. Unless you can tell
      | me you only consume media targeted at young children. Even
      | you average Marvel film leaves plenty unsaid that needs to
      | be infered, plenty unspoken to be felt. Non-linear
      | narrative's to evoke a response in the viewe, false
      | imagery, deception, feints and direct intuitional/emotional
      | appeals.
      | 
      | Now those might be targeted at just where you like them,
      | but thats admiring you like them and you agree with the
      | approach and that it's not stupid. It's just when thing
      | slave your preferred zone you begin to dislike them.
 
        | yupper32 wrote:
        | > If not, the only thing you'd enjoy are media targeted
        | at pre-schoolers and young children.
        | 
        | Oh come on, you know I wasn't talking about that kind of
        | challenge.
        | 
        | There are two things:
        | 
        | 1. Pieces that are more challenging to read/watch because
        | the story is deeper and the challenging read is required
        | to tell that story.
        | 
        | 2. A piece that purposely makes it the story harder to
        | follow, or is otherwise really difficult to follow,
        | without adding much depth.
        | 
        | I was clearly talking about #2.
        | 
        | "In fact, the plot isn't impossible to follow - it's just
        | extraordinarily difficult without a pen, a notepad and a
        | pause button to hand." - The article
        | 
        | That's just stupid, and absolutely falls into #2. It's a
        | crime drama.
 
      | nwienert wrote:
      | Only you are claiming it's only purpose is to make it more
      | difficult to follow. There are a hundred valid reasons to
      | have non-sequitur or ambiguity beyond the literal first-
      | level surface analysis of just making it harder to
      | understand.
 
    | ryandvm wrote:
    | Programmers are generally unhappy with fuzziness or else they
    | wouldn't be good programmers.
 
      | klyrs wrote:
      | You're describing a mediocre programmer. How do you choose
      | between two algorithms: small-scale runtime, large-scale
      | runtime, effort to write, effort to maintain, etc. Folks
      | who can't cope with ambiguity will make a single-measure
      | heuristic and pull the trigger immediately. It's great for
      | their 'goal accomplished' statistic, which mediocre
      | managers love, but that isn't what a _good_ programmer
      | would do.
 
      | Joeboy wrote:
      | The enjoyment of figuring out what's going on in something
      | like Mulholland Drive is rather similar to the enjoyment of
      | debugging a complex bug. There's a frustration about it not
      | immediately making sense, but there's also a pleasure to
      | working it out.
      | 
      | Primer on the other hand, I think all you can really do is
      | accept that there are big unexplained gaps in the story,
      | and no amount of debugging is going to help. I personally
      | take that as a fun hint of a larger story you're not
      | seeing.
      | 
      | Never seen The Big Sleep so not sure which it's more like.
 
  | wccrawford wrote:
  | I absolutely agree.
  | 
  | I _love_ being made to think during a movie. I _despise_ the
  | movie ending without an ending.
  | 
  | It's incredibly easy to set up a scenario that could have
  | multiple endings, but it's hard to see what the ending actually
  | is before it happens.
  | 
  | It's a lot more entertaining and satisfying to view that
  | scenario to the end and then have the tale end in a satisfying
  | way.
  | 
  | Any idiot can come up with an ending to those tales. (And they
  | do, because you'll find them posted on the internet afterwards,
  | even if the movie already has one!) Only good writers can come
  | up with good endings.
 
    | recursive wrote:
    | Sometimes I enjoy _not_ being satisfied. On a few occasions,
    | I 've even not watched or read the end of a work, just to
    | keep the possibilities open in my mind. Stories with big open
    | questions have the ability to stick with me longer. Sometimes
    | I like that.
 
  | nonameiguess wrote:
  | It's interesting that you're citing a film made 60 years before
  | the 21st century as an example of a 21st century trend. If
  | anything, we seem to be moving in the opposite direction. Star
  | Wars tried to explain where the force comes from. Christopher
  | Nolan includes ridiculously detailed exposition dumps
  | explaining everything (in spite of the ambiguous ending of
  | Inception, everything about how the world worked was explained
  | in meticulous detail). Even the canonical mystery box master
  | himself, Damon Lindelof, took to heart all the backlash about
  | the non-explanation ending of Lost. Nobody expected The
  | Leftovers would ever give an explanation of what caused the
  | Sudden Departure, but it did.
  | 
  | Heck, even David Lynch himself gave Laura Palmer an origin
  | story in Twin Peaks: The Return! And even where he tried to
  | preserve some mystery, the companion book by Mark Frost
  | explained all of it.
 
    | psychomugs wrote:
    | I really root for Nolan; I very much liked Interstellar and
    | enjoyed Tenet, but I think he's a clear example of someone
    | who excelled so much at a commercial medium that the get-the-
    | most-butts-in-seats factor necessitates the exposition
    | diarrhea. There's just enough ambiguity for the common
    | pseudo-news-site or vlogger to make "the ending of $FILMTITLE
    | REALLY explained" content.
    | 
    | I think Lynch, who's learned to "rule over small films than
    | serve large corporate ones" [1], probably bent over a little
    | bit to get The Return made, but I still left with as many, if
    | not more, questions as I had coming in.
    | 
    | [1] https://youtu.be/GopJ1x7vK2Q?t=567
 
  | jerf wrote:
  | I feel similarly about the "twist" that "it was just a dream!"
  | or something similar. It's _already_ fiction. It 's already
  | made up. If I wanted to be stuck with just the stories &
  | endings and such I could make up, I wouldn't be coming to you
  | for a story. Not that there isn't room for ambiguity or
  | complexity or anything, but, I already _know_ what I think. I
  | 'm here precisely to find out what someone _else_ thinks, and
  | "well, what do _you_ think? " is not very helpful.
 
    | Joeboy wrote:
    | "It was just a dream" only works if it suggests an actual
    | ending. Eg. Brazil, Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge. I don't
    | think it's a viable twist in itself.
 
      | recursive wrote:
      | "Scenic Route" is another movie that does this. I like it.
 
  | graposaymaname wrote:
  | Well it might be at times.
  | 
  | But there are movies/stories where it adds a whole different
  | layer upon leaving that decision to the viewer.
  | 
  | For me the final scene in Inception is a really good example of
  | using the above said ambiguity.
 
  | leephillips wrote:
  | Ambiguity, the planting of multiple possible interpretations,
  | has been a part of art forever. All art: literature, painting,
  | etc. I would even say it's an integral part of the best art.
 
    | dang wrote:
    | Yes, but not ambiguity about the basic facts of a story.
    | That's a modern thing as far as I know. It's also a risky
    | artistic move because it thwarts one of the main
    | satisfactions in a story, the resolution of tension. If
    | you're going to take that away, you'd better 'give' something
    | that's equally satisfying, or else the reader/viewer will
    | feel cheated.
 
      | technothrasher wrote:
      | > but not ambiguity about the basic facts of a story.
      | 
      | Really?? The "unreliably narrator" is a classic literary
      | device that introduces ambiguity about the basic facts of
      | many well loved stories. See "Wuthering Heights" as an
      | almost 200 year old example, or "The Handmaid's Tale" as an
      | extreme example of factual ambiguity from about 40 years
      | ago.
 
        | dang wrote:
        | Unreliable narrator is something different. How do you
        | know the narrator is unreliable in the first place?
        | Because the story includes enough information to
        | contradict them. The _narrator_ is unreliable, but the
        | _author_ is not--in fact you 're relying on the author to
        | subtly inform you that the narrator can't be trusted.
        | That's a device which goes back much earlier, at least to
        | the romantic period. But what we're talking about here is
        | different. "Unreliable author" might be a good name for
        | it though.
 
      | leephillips wrote:
      | This may not be a counterexample, because they are probably
      | classified as modern, but people carry on disputes about
      | the basic elements of the plots of Nabokov's novels. There
      | is no general agreement about the actual plot of
      | _Transparent Things_ , and a lot of argument over what
      | really happened in _Lolita_. In many of his works, such as
      | _Pale Fire_ and _Bend Sinister_ , you have to think a lot
      | just to apprehend what the plot was, and when you get it,
      | it is as if the author has emerged at the end to consume
      | the story from the beginning, in a glorious spiral of
      | invention. The ambiguity itself is the main element of the
      | plot.
      | 
      | Pardon my EDIT: _The Prisoner_ , from 1967-8, was when
      | ambiguity came to American TV, and with it Art (although
      | there were precursors). To this day people argue about the
      | plot of that one. People were so distressed at what they
      | perceived, at the time, to be a lack of resolution (or
      | their inability to deal with metaphor) that McGoohan had to
      | go into hiding for a while. Really, the problem is that
      | most people just don't pay attention.
 
      | tsimionescu wrote:
      | I think this has become a modern trend especially in long-
      | form art (television, book series), where it's been noticed
      | that mystery plots are a good way of attracting and
      | maintaining an audience with much less effort than crafting
      | a satisfying narrative takes. That's how we get things like
      | Lost, Battlestar Galactica, or the Game of Thrones TV show
      | (perhaps the ASOIAF books as well, but time will tell), as
      | two prime examples of captivating the audience without a
      | clear plan.
 
  | bazeblackwood wrote:
  | The art understander has logged on.
 
    | dang wrote:
    | Can you please not post unsubstantive/flamebait comments to
    | HN, and especially not snarky ones? We're trying for
    | something different here.
    | 
    | https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
 
| meijer wrote:
| The young Lauren Bacall somehow looks very contemporary. No idea
| why...
 
| LarrySellers wrote:
| When I realized that _The Big Lebowski_ is _The Big Sleep_ +
| bowling it blew my mind
 
  | AutumnCurtain wrote:
  | Definitely very inspired by. The whole Jackie Treehorn element
  | in particular
 
| lqet wrote:
| Regarding classic film-noir movies, I found "The Lady from
| Shanghai" by Orson Welles _much_ more baffling, and also
| frustrating. The first time I watched it, I didn 't really get
| the plot. As a big Orson Welles fan, I assumed it was my fault
| and consulted Wikipedia. The Wikipedia understanding of the plot
| was equivalent to mine and didn't answer any questions, so I
| watched it a second time, and a third time. There are massive
| plot holes. I really believe that Welles was not interested in a
| coherent plot, he just needed a vehicle for beautiful
| cinematography and great acting. But it is _so_ frustrating if
| you try to follow a complicated plot, only to realise at the end
| of the movie that not even the director was able to understand
| it.
 
  | WalterBright wrote:
  | The "Lost" miniseries is enjoyable only once you accept that it
  | simply doesn't make any sense. Just enjoy the moments.
  | 
  | Though "Lost" was on to something with the dialog "it's a
  | snowglobe!" They could have followed up on that, leading to a
  | satisfying conclusion, but as with everything else, it just
  | went nowhere.
 
    | dragonwriter wrote:
    | > The "Lost" miniseries
    | 
    | Is this different than the _Lost_ series of 6 seasons and 121
    | episodes?
    | 
    | Or is this just an unusual use of the prefix "mini-"?
 
      | jcrawfordor wrote:
      | I've heard a joke along the lines of "I loved LOST, it's a
      | shame they only made one season" from multiple people.
      | Whether they allow one or two seasons of the show to
      | actually exist in their memory depends on the person.
 
      | WalterBright wrote:
      | Yes, that Lost.
 
    | asdff wrote:
    | I'm really surprised LOST still has that reputation years
    | after release. Having seen the entire thing, I think the plot
    | makes sense and there aren't very many holes. The writers
    | omit a lot early on but I felt like it gets answered by the
    | end as you learn more about the island. In the moment as it
    | was being released year by year I can see how it was seen as
    | confusing when you'd wait for a while to get an explanation,
    | but these days you could binge the entire thing.
 
      | WalterBright wrote:
      | Having an "explanation" that it's all pointless magic is
      | not an explanation.
      | 
      | I suspect that the writers originally had a coherent story
      | arc, but the show was so successful they had to extend,
      | extend, extend it, which produced the incoherence.
 
        | asdff wrote:
        | Well, it is one of the most highly regarded series in
        | history by critics, so some people thought the
        | explanations were sufficient at least. Abrams and the
        | writers were planning from the outset to do that many
        | seasons and wrote a story bible outlining all the lore
        | and mythology referenced throughout the writing. Having
        | story arcs over the course of years was intentional and a
        | novel idea at the time when most TV series plots were
        | written on a per episode basis.
 
        | mattmanser wrote:
        | Why do you think it's highly regarded by critics?
        | 
        | Final season's got a relatively low rating on rotten
        | tomatoes.
        | 
        | It's referenced as a joke series in my circles, if you
        | want to refer to something pointlessly convoluted with no
        | pay-off.
        | 
        | Personally, I stopped at the beginning of season 3 when I
        | realized the writers didn't have a clue where to go with
        | the plot.
 
        | handrous wrote:
        | Whoa, we must follow very different critics. My
        | impression is that it's usually referenced as a joke, or
        | as an example of how _not_ to do things. I 'm not sure
        | I've seen it unironically praised since back when it was
        | still airing.
 
  | anigbrowl wrote:
  | I don't remember enough about Welles' life and career without
  | checking to be sure, but there's a good chance that the flaws
  | are the result of welles' running out of money or having
  | control of the film taken away by other producers due to his
  | inability to meet deadlines.
 
| zabzonk wrote:
| I remember watching it (I'd seen it before) with an audience of
| stoner undergrads at St. Andrews University (not the brightest of
| people - I was at Edinburgh) and having to explain what exactly
| was going on, not helped by being somewhat stoned myself.
| 
| But do films (or any art) have to "make sense"? For example, I've
| never really worked out what the original "Solaris" is about, but
| it doesn't stop it from being both scary and moving.
 
  | themodelplumber wrote:
  | > But do films (or any art) have to "make sense"?
  | 
  | In a lot of ways I think it depends on your role, and the role
  | of the film in your experience. If your role is to enjoy, then
  | I hope the film was created with your preferred perceptive
  | style in mind.
  | 
  | If your role is to write a paper on a film, maybe the make-
  | sense films make that whole assignment much easier.
  | 
  | Solaris is a tremendous sensory experience on its own. You can
  | pick up on a lot of the implications by interpreting the film's
  | sensory output as metaphor. From facial expressions to
  | positioning, texture, and sound / music.
  | 
  | A lot of people find that relaxing because the metaphor-
  | extraction process is like a background process for them and it
  | feeds their intuitive grasp of what's unfolding in the "big
  | picture" of the film. They tend to take in and process much of
  | life in the same way.
  | 
  | At the same time, not everybody enjoys that, and it will make
  | some people downright uncomfortable. To be comfortable with a
  | film, maybe they need to be able to piece it together logically
  | for example, or at least be able to create by themselves an
  | explanation/exposition of the contents where one didn't exist
  | before.
  | 
  | Incidentally, I find the sensory-experiential/metaphorical
  | approach (my go-to) much less fulfilling while watching films
  | created by people who are more logical and detail-driven.
  | 
  | For example, I was rewatching _The Spanish Prisoner_ the other
  | day and it was painfully clear that Mamet really wanted viewers
  | to track his labyrinth of aphoristic details.
  | 
  | From a sensory-metaphor perspective there wasn't much to work
  | with, and the film didn't seem to "make sense" from that
  | intuitive standpoint.
  | 
  | But it's less painful IMO, and maybe even more pleasurable,
  | when you know the kind of gifts and preferred perspectives the
  | director is working with, and at least you're aware that you
  | can make a decision to change your perceptive focus, or watch
  | something else. That aspect makes sense to me, and helps me
  | watch films that wouldn't otherwise make sense in this way or
  | that one.
 
| okareaman wrote:
| Whew! I thought it was just me.
 
| telesphore wrote:
| It's a matter of setting up expectations and balancing that with
| good story telling.
| 
| Ambiguity, elision, out-of-order story telling, etc. are all part
| of art but it's a delicate balance. There's a contract that
| artists set up with the audience that will allow them to use
| these techniques. Primer is one of those where I'm OK with my
| confusion because the story was interesting without all the
| answers, and it was setup pretty early on that this wasn't an A
| to B story. On the other hand, the fade-to-black ending of The
| Sopranos was, in my opinion, a total violation of that contract.
| Nowhere did they setup that kind of ambiguity. Yes, it's a series
| vs. a movie but my point still stands.
| 
| No Country for Old Men, again IMO, rides that line a little
| close. Sure the Bardem character checks his boots at the end but
| there were some other major gaps that I don't think were set up.
| It was well acted and produced but expectations were not managed
| so it still goes into my meh pile.
| 
| When it works the it's a lot of fun figuring things out. I'll
| have to give The Big Sleep a try.
| 
| Edit: At the other end of the spectrum, expository lumps are no
| fun either.
 
  | lqet wrote:
  | > On the other hand, the fade-to-black ending of The Sopranos
  | was, in my opinion, a total violation of that contract. Nowhere
  | did they setup that kind of ambiguity.
  | 
  | I respectfully disagree. One of the qualities of "The Sopranos"
  | was exactly that things weren't always spelled out explicitely.
  | Also, I did not really find the ending to be extremely
  | ambigious. I mean, it is pretty clear what happened.
 
| pjmorris wrote:
| I was amazed and astonished when I first saw 'The Big Sleep',
| early in my college career. I'd never seen a movie I had a hard
| time following before, and I was captivated.
| 
| There's an old Steve Yegge post where he described presenting for
| Jeff Bezos. I'm paraphrasing, but Yegge said something like after
| writing the presentation (no slides), delete every fifth
| paragraph to keep Bezos intrigued enough to pay attention. I feel
| like that's what happened to either the script or the filming of
| 'The Big Sleep.'
| 
| EDIT: Every third paragraph, link to Yegge post:
| https://gist.github.com/kislayverma/6681d4cce736cd7041e6c821...
 
  | lqet wrote:
  | This is also exactly how I felt when I first watched "The
  | Godfather: Part 2". There was just so much left out, and so
  | much of extreme significance was only _slightly_ hinted at
  | (just take the scene where Michael realizes the betrayal!). If
  | you only stop paying attention for a single scene, chances are
  | that you will not get the plot. That not only makes you
  | completely immersed in the movie, it also makes for very
  | satisfying rewatches.
 
    | zmp0989 wrote:
    | Funny (to me) story about the first time I watched the first
    | two Godfather films. I was in high school and home pretty
    | ill. My dad rented both films for me. I was so out of it that
    | I didn't know which family was the Corleones until midway
    | through the 2nd movie.
 
    | jimbob45 wrote:
    | When I watch things with other people and I see them looking
    | down at their phone during scenes like the one where Michael
    | realizes the betrayal, I then know they're not going to have
    | enjoyed the movie because they'll have missed a critical
    | visual cue. I don't want to rewind the scene because that
    | seems passive-aggressive but I also don't want to waste
    | another two hours on their part on a movie that they almost
    | certainly can't enjoy anymore.
 
  | YeBanKo wrote:
  | The linked article reads like a pure idolization. It's like
  | Bible, except written not more than a thousand years ago but
  | now, and by fishermen, but by sw engineers, the message is the
  | same though.
 
  | aidenn0 wrote:
  | Per TFA there was an early cut with Marlowe in voiceover
  | explaining things. This was removed at some point, which does
  | indeed support your theory.
 
  | seph-reed wrote:
  | This was a really nice read.
  | 
  | I've made a habit lately of "checking out" on having any
  | opinion about anything I can't truly analyze. And this is a
  | great example of why.
  | 
  | I'm surrounded in content telling me why Bezos is a monster,
  | and they make a good argument. But for all that hatred, I've
  | never once heard a single mention of him being smart, let alone
  | intimidatingly smart, let alone "a first class genius" or
  | "better regarded as hyper-intelligent aliens with a tangential
  | interest in human affairs."
  | 
  | This seems like an important character detail to have been left
  | out.
 
    | soneca wrote:
    | I remember reading about him being very smart multiple times.
    | Just not on articles commenting Amazon workplace environment
    | and such, as it should not be indeed.
    | 
    | On articles about the beginnings of Amazon, the writing
    | culture, or anything that is in part a biography on Bezos, I
    | always see it mentioned how smart he is.
 
      | seph-reed wrote:
      | > Just not on articles commenting Amazon workplace
      | environment and such, as it should not be indeed
      | 
      | I think the distinction between "evil" and "evil genius" is
      | actually kind of important for a world that often anchors
      | its reality to Hollywood narratives. It sets up a more
      | believable antagonist, and makes it clear that -- unlike
      | the grinch -- their heart is not likely to change.
      | 
      | It also sets up the challenge: be smarter. If he was just
      | greedy, it might be a race to the bottom (greed always
      | wins). But in this case it's a race to the top
      | (intelligence seems to win).
      | 
      | I also think the distinction between "greed wins" and
      | "smart wins" extends with a similar lack of mention into
      | other popular "villains" like Elon or THE ZUCK.
      | 
      | At least for me, knowing that the richest person in the
      | world is also considered extremely smart by the smartest
      | people he could pay to work with him... it makes me feel
      | that -- unlike politics -- business is not yet a complete
      | race to the bottom.
 
    | yumaikas wrote:
    | I wonder how much of "smart" is due to his power, and how
    | much of it is due to his intellect.
    | 
    | I say this not because I don't believe he doesn't have an
    | impressive intellect, but because, well, what if someone had
    | his intellect, but worked in an Amazon warehouse due to
    | circumstances outside of their control?
 
      | WalterBright wrote:
      | Being smart isn't good enough. One must also be motivated,
      | be willing to put in the effort, and not be discouraged by
      | repeated failure.
      | 
      | I had a friend once who was very smart. He was always
      | starting new projects to make money, and always quit at the
      | first or second obstacle.
 
      | yumaikas wrote:
      | Lots of people with power shut down people who are smarter
      | than them for being annoying, I guess is what I'm getting
      | at.
 
        | AussieWog93 wrote:
        | I'd counter that by saying lots of people think they're
        | being smart but in fact are just annoying pedants (like
        | me!).
 
      | hellbannedguy wrote:
      | I think the "smart" compliment is just common sence. Build
      | up his ego, you might need him one day. Business 101.
      | 
      | 1. Yes--he built an impressive company, and a company ripe
      | for unionization. I've never understood why he allowed so
      | much counterfeit merch on that site? I can't imagine why he
      | didn't stifle that one.
      | 
      | 2. He gave away billions in a preventable divorce.
      | 
      | 3. Because of vanity, he wore those stupid cowboy hats
      | during that amusement ride for wealthy people. Looking back
      | that PR stunt could have been so much better.
      | 
      | 4. I really think his forte is diligence, and drive
      | testosterone gives a man. He was also first to market
      | basically, and tenacious.
      | 
      | Hell-- if he was truely a genius, he probally would have
      | never started the company. I'll go farther. Being smart
      | might be a impediment to a good businessman?
      | 
      | 5. I don't know Bezos. I don't know any successful
      | businessman, except one. The owner of Dentek. Oh yea, I do
      | know the CA governor. Both are far from intelligent. They
      | both came from wealthy families, and had sympathetic
      | fathers financing,planning,inventing prototypes in every
      | move in their lives. Intelligence had nothing to do with
      | their success.
      | 
      | 6. What makes Bezos special is it sounds like he didn't
      | come from money, and didn't have the sterotypical wealthy
      | father.
 
  | blacksqr wrote:
  | I remember I had to watch "The Long Goodbye" with Elliot Gould
  | three times to figure out exactly what was going on [0]. A
  | detective job in itself.
  | 
  | A good movie nonetheless.
  | 
  | [0]
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:The_Long_Goodbye_(film)#A...
 
| at_a_remove wrote:
| Take _Dark City_. I believe the studio forced a new opening that
| more or less explained everything rather than letting you puzzle
| it all out. I didn 't find the movie too hard to work through,
| but I think Hollywood execs have a fairly low estimation of the
| audience's intellect.
| 
| Lynch is a bit harder. Lynch is atypical in two ways that play
| off of one another. First and most obviously, he has been
| developing as a film-maker (as one would hope over the decades),
| but he expects that his audience would have kept up with him,
| introducing a kind of filmic vocabulary. I would say that
| _Mulholland Drive_ is much, much more comprehensible once you
| have understood what _Lost Highway_ is on about. In turn, _Lost
| Highway_ is an extended riff off of the dualism you would see in
| Twin Peaks and _Fire Walk With Me_. As to the second factor,
| Lynch is very heavy into TM and he would like to present images,
| sounds, and such to the viewer, and then find out what the viewer
| thinks of them. Not in a  "this is up to you to puzzle out,"
| rather he is pitching rocks and skipping stones off of what he
| likely believes is to be a collective unconscious or a shared
| cultural experience, then being excited about what might pop up.
| It's a genuine interest, I think.
 
  | RobertoG wrote:
  | That's great insight about Lynch.
  | 
  | I was totally puzzled by Mulholland Drive, then I read an
  | explanation in a IMDB review, watch it again, and I was amazed
  | that everything made sense. It was encrypted and somebody gave
  | me the keys. That's really an artistic experience.
 
    | earleybird wrote:
    | Great artists are often misunderstood, many who are
    | misunderstood are not great artists - The Sphinx :-)
 
  | LarrySellers wrote:
  | "I don't know why people expect art to make sense. They accept
  | the fact that life doesn't make sense." -- David Lynch
 
    | newsbinator wrote:
    | > They accept the fact that life doesn't make sense.
    | 
    | Most people, in most cultures, don't accept it as fact that
    | life doesn't make sense.
    | 
    | What % of people would agree with the statement "everything
    | happens for a reason"? Or even "because God did it".
    | 
    | Of those who don't think everything happens for a reason
    | (i.e. life makes sense... to someone), the vast majority
    | nevertheless believe we live in a universe of physical rules.
    | 
    | We accept we could get wiped out by an asteroid or a deadly
    | plague, sure. That makes sense.
    | 
    | We don't accept we could get wiped out by a Lynchian fever
    | dream. That doesn't make sense.
 
      | troutwine wrote:
      | What sense does getting wiped out by a plague make?
 
        | newsbinator wrote:
        | You could look at it a dozen different ways, depending on
        | your sense-making framework:
        | 
        | * God did it (makes sense- God does cataclysmic stuff)
        | 
        | * Nature did it (makes sense- biology is a jerk and we
        | haven't mastered it yet)
        | 
        | * Humans did it by mistake (makes sense- we make huge
        | errors all the time)
        | 
        | * etc
 
    | psychomugs wrote:
    | I've been on a mini Lynch binge recently (Twin Peaks, Blue
    | Velvet, and a lot of his interviews on Linda Faludi's
    | excellent channel [1]) and I feel like this quote sums him
    | up.
    | 
    | [1] https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVdYdogQM2xd29HUOED4EbQ
 
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