Printer-friendly copy Email this topic to a friend
Lobby Pass The Popcorn topic #735713

Subject: "Definitely a movie-of-the-year contender in a bereft year" Previous topic | Next topic
Nodima
Member since Jul 30th 2008
15319 posts
Mon Dec-28-20 12:12 AM

Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this authorClick to view this author's profileClick to add this author to your buddy listClick to send message via AOL IM
8. "Definitely a movie-of-the-year contender in a bereft year"
In response to In response to 0


  

          

Soul cleverly inverts so many tropes and invokes so many movies I love that...

I bristle at the idea this is a children's movie kids won't love, because even if kids won't love this movie I don't think this is supposed to be that. This is Pixar doing all their usual manipulative (a word I want to use only to exploit it) tricks while making a firmly adult movie. This is Studio Ghibli reminding us that we're all in need of a little imagination sometimes, supremely talented artists reminding us that the best thing about a waking life are the dreams we have when we drift across the planes.

There's a heartwarming vision of transhumanism here - as well as more relatable transgednerism - as well as a stark refutation of nihilism, agnosticism and in many ways the opposites of all that. Soul's message traffics in unspoken idioms and triumphs over simpler philosophical understandings of the human struggle to make the argument humanity isn't constantly struggling for purpose or meaning, but a more generic love for new experiences. It's one thing to play the keys, another entirely to realize the keys will keep thudding long after you're gone.

The movie is beautiful, from its depiction of the afterlife and its bettors (and I do mean bettors) to the shadowy, lively state of its real world. At every moment one gets the impression director Pete Docter only settled on animation because the humor and imagery would have fallen slightly flat in an impressionistic piece featuring real bodies. So to might the message have been dulled by attempting to portray life and death as separate planes of animation in the true sense, of bodies interacting and experiencing.

One of my constant worries is death, and therefore one of my favorite genre of movies has always been an explanation thereof; aside from Tom Cruise fighting Henry Cavill aboard dueling helicopters, it's the one physical reality we can't truly understand. Soul wants to feel good about that, but understand we ultimately must feel bad - after all, this is just another imagined space our minds have created to soothe the eldering of all of us. If the movie does devolve into tropiness, it's for a purpose - that is all life ultimately is, and our growing rejection of tropes is indicative of our desire to feel young, to be a youth, again and again.


~~~~~~~~~
"This is the streets, and I am the trap." � Jay Bilas
http://www.popmatters.com/pm/archive/contributor/517
Hip Hop Handbook: http://tinyurl.com/ll4kzz

  

Printer-friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote


Soul (Docter, 2020) costarring ?uestlove [View all] , handle, Sat Aug-24-19 10:19 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
I Can Tell From That Synopsis, I'm Not Gonna Like It
Aug 25th 2019
1
Defending Your Life has long been a favorite of mine
Mar 13th 2020
4
Jon Batiste and Trent Reznor? Odd combo
Aug 26th 2019
2
Soul Official Trailer
Mar 12th 2020
3
Pixar is making weird movies
Mar 13th 2020
5
      Pixar: death, Death, DEATH!!
Mar 13th 2020
6
           it's kind of come full circle, no?
Mar 14th 2020
7
Well written
Dec 28th 2020
9
Not perfect but what a beautiful palate-cleanser after WW84
Dec 28th 2020
10
I didn't really like this
Jan 04th 2021
11
In this line. I appreciate some of it, but don't know if I'll watch agai...
Jan 04th 2021
12
it was good, enjoyable
Jan 06th 2021
13

Lobby Pass The Popcorn topic #735713 Previous topic | Next topic
Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.25
Copyright © DCScripts.com