I like this a lot. Some nice posts from you in general meng.
@Bullitt68 as well (and I promise to shut up about
Inception).
A lot of anti-intellectual sentiment directed towards film arises from disregard of its ability to provide novel insight. That the sum total of our lives informs us better than the art we consume. I mean, sure, it's hard to argue against, but it misses an entire avenue of insight - audience reaction. I had a conversation with a friend about
The Amazing Spiderman. I said the film placed the emotions of selfish romantic protagonists before the central ethos (in writing parlance, what the audience
needs). The movie concludes with Peter's dismissal of Uncle Ben's sage advice so he can continue to get some. My buddy missed this, which, hey, it happens. But he additionally declared that I couldn't be thinking about every film this way.
Christ, Spidey is a
hero to kids. Fuck that film. If I ever have a child, he/she can watch anything but we're going to be discussing after. You see it all the time, people expecting the milestones of their relationships to align with the tropes of some truly heinous romantic tripe. Stupid shit like the friend zone, the bro-code keep eroding understanding between sexes.
Observing how people respond to film and TV informs you of
the way media goes about it in the first place. That in turn informs you of technique. That then helps you place the creators as belonging to a particular vocation and/or tradition. That in turn opens up who is doing it 'better' or 'worse' than others. People often get tripped up at this point, wondering (see
Bullitt and
Flem's back-and-forth) whether there really is a way to objectively judge these things. It doesn't matter: you're already at the point of discussing it, and likely gleaning insight from
getting to that point. At each of the turns that got you there are an endless number of detours - new filmmakers, new techniques, varied audience reactions to study. Just stay open.