gbollard wrote:
I'm not sure why I'm so defensive of his films, especially since I wasn't overly impressed with anything after his first film. I guess it's because M. Night is one of the few people who has the guts to make ORIGINAL films.
Yes, that's what keeps me interested in his work, and in his career.
I just watched "Unbreakable" again, and although it's very watchable, ( unlike "The Village" ), I think the ending is glib, ( as if he lost faith in the story, in his characters, and what they might have had to tell if he'd let them live a bit longer ), and went for a "neat" twist to tie it up. I think he spent too long on presenting/narrating the "discovery" of the "talent", and not enough time on seeing what happens to talent if it is uncovered and used exclusively to justify one's life.
If Mr Glass represents the need to find meaning in life, a purpose to one's life, at any cost, then it seems as if the embryonic talent, Sentryman/Bruce Willis, that it discovers after years of searching, turns its back in disgust and censure at the end. *** Is Shyamalan really suggesting that is what talent does if it is sought after as justification for one's life? It isn't satisfying to end a film with a moralistic message like that. There is a whole "relationship" between talent and the need for meaning which is abandoned there, sadly for the film, ( and disastrously perhaps for Shyamalan's art ).
The idea that looking for meaning/purpose to one's life is necessarily destructive is very interesting, but not at all proven; it might make a good debate in the PPR forum! The odd thing is that he contradicts this message in "Signs". He is obsessed in that with "meaning/significations", but now the urge to find them is ok, is glorified.
I think that it is this kind of "moralising" which diminishes "Unbreakable", spoils "Signs", and ruins "The Village". I wonder if he is passing through some sort of self-censuring/punishing and righteous/"grandiose" process as a result of insights into his own behaviour which provoked guilt/remorse. I hope he comes out of it soon, because I also think he is an original, still capable of great things.
*** Interestingly, you could say that that is what has happened to Shyamalan's talent!
It has got all "superior" and self-righteous, distanced itself from what is breakable, human, etc. Those things which made/make "The Sixth Sense" so beautiful/perfect.
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Last edited by ouinon on 23 Apr 2009, 4:34 am, edited 1 time in total.