Billy Grissom's Amazing Film 108 Blog

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

The Fly

Although special effects were poor and the acting was pretty terrible, the idea behind the film is rather brilliant. The "no" that is screamed at the end is so mind boggling that I can still picture the Doctor being devoured by the spider slowly.

I think the fact that the Doctor's life hangs in the finding of a fly shows some symbolism. The wife talks about how the world might not be ready for a teleporter and how everything is moving so fastly. With the Doctor turning into a fly it seems as if the film is echoing that sometimes in order to find humanity amongst these technical chaos we must resort to primitive actions where technology is virtually useless. if anything, the pursuit of the fly shows that technology hinders the importance of life. The fly is a symbol of the Doctor's life, but the family has difficult catching him, largely because of technical things in the way. I think the scene where the fly is trapped in the window shows this. The fly sits in the window with the boy on one side and the mother quickly approaching from the other side. Life is captured by technology and the mother and boy come close to capturing it and holding it forever. Yet, at the last second the fly breaks free from the window, a n offspring of human technology, and is able to soar high into the sky seeking freedom.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Invasion of the Body Snatchers

I was amazed by how frightful this film really was. I thought the title would prove that the film was rather lame and poorly done, but it was actually quite scary and thought provoking. This film reflect a lot of Benjamin's idea. The whole movie seems to build on the concept of something being extracted form its shell. We clearly see this with the speech that the psychiatrist and Miles's friends give when they have him and Becky kidnapped. Watching this movie made me question whether or not we're really heading nit his direction. The world is becoming so efficient and so mechanical tha tit seems that maybe humans ourselves may become mechanical one day. i think it is rather astounding that a film from the 1950's can still prove as a wakeup call today.

Monday, October 1, 2007

Reflection to Robo Cop

The last time I saw this movie I was 8 years old. In heinsight, it probably wasn't very good parenting for parents to allow a youngster to watch a movie this violent. Nevertheless, at that age I couldn't really admire the film; all I could think was that Robo Cop was cool looking and had a big gun. Now, after watching it at a much older age I can take this film to be much more.

The concept of Robo Cop is close to the story of Frankenstein. Like Frankenstein, a dead man is resurrected and given life. In this new life form he stronger and more advance than the man that created him. The difference, however, is that Robo Cop is a force of good, while Frankenstein was a pure evil killing machine. Robo Cop acts as a force of good because it is what he was programmed to do. However, his character also causes him to excel in doing good. For a creation, Robo Cop exhibits a lot of human characteristics. Perhaps the most interesting is how his former self shines through his mechanical being. For example, the scientist claim they've whipped his memory clear, yet Robo Cop still exhibits a lot of the human things he use to do. He still twirls his gun and repeats his catch phrases such as "Dead or alive you're coming with me". In time he comes to remember his name and his past life. This is a very interesting concept. It's as if the director is showing us that no matter how much you try to convert a man into a machine, the human side will always show.

If Robo Cop were truly a machine, then he would only follow what he's been programmed to do. Yet, we see that although Robo Cop looks like a machine, he is actually human. Had Robo Cop been pure machine he would've never been able to arrest Dick Jones because of Directive 4. After the first attempt, Robo Cop would've shut down and stop in his pursuit against Dick Jones. Yet, his human side pushes him to go onward and act as what he was in real life: an officer.

Aside Robo Cop himself, a lot can be said about the concept of the film. As stated in lecture we can see a lot about the transition from modern times to post modern times. OCP is so fed up with the city and crime that it hopes to build a completely brand new city. This relates to the idea of the machine taking precedence over mankind. To everyone at OCP, there is no real concern about the city or its citizens. Everyone only cares about the “old man’s dream”. The old man, doesn’t seem to care about the people either. All he cares about is his “dream” coming true. The old man’s dream is a machine. The dream is a massive creation, a brand new city; something new that the world has never seen before. He hopes to create a utopia. Delta City is nothing more than a project that OCP wants to become true. Robo Cop was created so that this project could get going. Robo Cop had nothing to do with actually saving Detroit.

Robo Cop’s central theme is that man can become so enwrapped in creating that it’ll sometimes put the creation before the machine. Yet Robo Cop brings hope. Robo Cop shows that even though the machine can be put before man, man can still triumph. As we see, although Robo Cop is a machine, in the end his human side shines through and saves the day.