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  • RE: Coraline

    Sunday, Feb 8, 2009 4:41PM / Standard Entry / Movies

    The passage unraveled like the bending section of the straw; and adventure commences.

    I read the book 'Coraline' by Neil Gaiman a night before I sat in the dimmed theatre, with a pair of polarized 3D glasses perched on my nose, and watched Henry Selick's version flash before my eyes. A million thoughts whizzed through my mind, but some that stayed as I rolled them around and around were:
    a) Wow. Coraline is such a strong child. I especially loved the part where she talked about her father fighting wasps to buy her the time to run out of the wasteland. It's from the book:
    "And he said it wasn't brave of him, doing that, just standing there and being stung," said Coraline to the cat. "It wasn't brave because he wasn't scared, it was the only thing he could do. But going back again to get his glasses, when he knew the wasps were there, when he was really scared. That was brave."
    b) Even though it was written as a children's story, the dark hmour, dark insinuations, and vivid diction would have shaken most children. If a ten-year-old watched this movie, I would suggest his/her parents/guardians to have a new bedsheet ready, because he/she will wet the bed from nightmares.The movie especially hammered this point, for if the child read the book and didn't understand, it would stump their vivid imagination from picturing the story in their heads. They would ask an adult to explain, or go to the dictionary. But the movie feeds images to children. And these visuals are much easier to relate to: the colours, the appearences of the characters, the music, and the tone of the dialogue. Some examples are: Misses Spink and Fircible's waspy, coccoony appearences on the stage, the stuffed dogs, the corner's of Wybie's mouth sewn up into a painful smile, the grotesque form that used to be Coraline's other father, the black lifeless button eyes... too many to list. The ratings may need to be changed...
    c) When I was halfway into the book, I had the impression of this book being a product of "Alice in the Wonderland" and "The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe - Narnia Chronicles". A door that leads to a fantastical, too perfect, parallel universe. A bit like Edmund's first reaction to Narnia and the 'love and attention' the evil witch showered him with. The children were able to choose when they could enter/leave Narnia, much like how the tunnel from Coraline's world worked.
    d) The movie's tagline: "Be careful what you wish for" had also given this movie a new meaning. It is not just a movie to scare children or show how heroic Coraline was. It also encompasses the idea that every wish comes with a price - a conseqnence. And in order to obtain your goal, you must earn it fair and square. Through love. Through trust. Through friendship. Something concret and sturdy. It must be bestowed upon for good behaviour, given as encouragement for one's way of handling situations. Not carelessly, thoughtlessly given as a treat.

    I definitely recommend this movie to all who enjoys a good thriller. A good meaningful animation. But (probably) not for young children.

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  • RE: Seven Pounds

    Tuesday, Jan 20, 2009 12:54PM / Standard Entry / Movies

    I spent a good deal of my Winter Solstice outside with a friend and we watched a movie - Seven Pounds. Breat movie. Tragic. Shed a few teas towards the end. And the last scene where the ex-blind meets ex-heart failure was really well done. As if saying "eyes are the windows to your heart", or something akin to that. As if all truth is unraveled.

    The plot was really well thought out. The character "Tim" was a genius. He basically forced everyone to overlook his (successful) attempt of suicide, to continue living with a part of him in themselves. His brother The child. The abused mother. The woman working at family services. The hockey coach. The vegan who worked as a meat salesman. However, I couldn't count the seventh. Was it the old woman at the beginning of the movie who took a shower? Or was it the man whom he punnished by not giving him a second chance?

    The actual idea... though: he took seven lives in seven seconds - one of which was his lover. He commits suicide in order to repent for the accident and in return, saves seven(?) lives. Perhaps the last person would be himself, as he releases himself from this burden.

    A part that I found conflicting was the fact that he had sex with the woman whom he claimed he loves before he commits suicide. To join his old, dead lover. There's something about that whichscreams selfishness, you know? But I guess everyone has their own guilty pleasure.

    Another part hat I found iffy was the chances of finding a donor with the same 'special' bloodtype is around 3-5%. But Tim (Will Smith) found a dying woman with the same blood in need of a heart. Her body didn't reject the heart. This is a bit too convenient. Like a fictional story, nearly.

    Either way. A good movie. I would definitely recommend it.

    PS: I asked my dad (a family physician) whether a heart, with all the blood inside, has the mass of seven pounds. And he replied that it shouldn't. Perhaps the title kind of suggests a "heavy hearted" emotion? I feel the weight as the ending nears.

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  • Hi everyone, it's Anrealis speaking! I'm a first year college student at Sheridan for Illustration. I love the school, the teachers, and the new people I meet...

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