Quote from: Jon on February 10, 2010, 10:24:44 PMWhen I say it can't be judged as a film, I mean that the general everyday audience won't see it as such.Which is exactly why I find Shindler's List problematic, but not Braveheart. And your Braveheart comment together with the one above exactly proves my point.
When I say it can't be judged as a film, I mean that the general everyday audience won't see it as such.
First, nowhere in my review or my responses do I intimate that I think the film shouldn't have been made. But I wish that it wouldn't be treated as some sort of Gospel according to Steven.
Second, to say that by now we would have blanket acceptance of the 'What Holocaust' scenario is naive at best. With Auschwitz, Birkenau and Dachau still standing as memorial museums, the films taken by the Allies when they liberated the camps, the History Channel, PBS and the BBC still churning out documentaries on the subject, that scenario will never come to fruition.
Never said you did. And I've never treated it as "Gospel" either. Just very important. I was more responding to Jimmy at that point, but I am picking up something and I hope I'm wrong. It's this flippancy toward Spielberg, like none of you have any respect for him as a 'proper' film-maker, so therefore you can't take him seriously, and so you believe he is approaching the story as an entertainer would. Therefore Schindler's List should be considered nothing more than a movie, because this upstart is nothing more than a showman who makes movies. So essentially you're annoyed because this guy who makes popcorn movies about cute aliens has become recognised as producing the benchmark of Holocaust films (whether it is or not is irrelevant). And you wish everyone else could see The Emperor's New Clothes?
Well, I can only speak as someone of my generation here in the UK. When I was at school and was taught about the second world war, it felt like it was centuries ago. It didn't happen to us or anyone we knew. It was just facts and figures that had no context. Documentaries like you refer to are marvellous, but back then, just more grainy footage of people I didn't know from long ago. I saw those clips from the camps and they shocked me, but I still couldn't put them in context.
Then I guess we are definitely from two different generations then. I didn't learn about the Final Solution in school, in fact it was a Saturday night back in 1975 when I was enlightened as to this most horrific part of history.
I know the kids don't read anymore but we did, don't tell me Jon that it was different for you.
As to the Emperor's New Clothes, I've learned one thing in the many years I've been discussing films. No matter what, you can't sway people when they have their mind set on a belief, and I would never even attempt to do so. You think it's the Holy Grail of Holocaust drama, I don't. I appreciate your position, but just as I can't sway you in your belief, you'll not change mine.
While I agree with that, you, Matthias and Jimmy have not acknowledged that it is possible that Spielberg communicated a subject to a new generation, who became enlightened and deeply affected by it.