![]() Free Fitness in Columbus for all ages and fitness levels.Go stargazing with Planetarium at The Arne Slettebak Planetarium at OSU.The most beautiful public gardens in Columbus.national parks + Free National Parks Pass for 4th grade families Discounted and Free Museum Days in Columbus.Columbus Museum of Art Free Sundays, discounts, & more.Columbus Zoo Tickets, Discounts, and Free Days.Over 325 festivals in Columbus and Central Ohio in 2023.Big List of the Best Fall Dates in Columbus.50+ Best free and cheap dates in Columbus.Explore Columbus with Neighborhood Hops and Walks.Over 185 options for fun this weekend in Columbus!.Where to go berry picking in Columbus this Spring and Summer.U-pick: Peach and Apple picking in Columbus.Huge list of Farmers Markets in Columbus for 2023.It will make you question every memory you have, almost as much as possessing a psychology degree, as I do! So, go and see it: be confused, acknowledge the frailty of all you know to be true, and then imagine the freedom of actually being Lenny, and then the horror of having nothing, nothing but the reliance of a pen and a Polaroid camera to know who you are. Nothing will seem as black and white as it did beforehand. Oh, and the plot? It really doesn't matter, all you need to know is that everything about this film is indicative of the subjectivity of memory, of our experiences and interpretations of all that happens to us. But as it stands it has all three, isn't trite and says so much about humanity. ![]() I'm not even sure if watching it again will make things any less ambiguous, but then who cares? The ambiguity is what makes this a great film, if it wasn't so cut up, or from Lenny's perspective it would be both very short and trite and lacking in tension, suspense and interest. It's just like holding ten different and linearly distinct Polaroids in your hand and having a short-term memory disorder. Pieces are shown a number of times with no real linear link between them, just like it would be if we ourselves had a memory disorder, and then they are cut up and edited next to things that happen either before or after it. Another beauty of this film is the way it is filmed and edited. The beauty of this film though is that my interpretation could be so different from yours, and neither of us could be sure whose interpretation is the right one if there is a right one at all. It is therefore perfect for those who love to second guess what's going to happen, who did what, who's doing what and why. The film begins where it should end, so far so trite, but here's the beauty, we, like Guy Pearce, learn in fragments what's going on. This therefore creates an imaginative, creatively unsurpassable film. The difference between this film and Wintersleepers however is that Memento is entirely from Lenny's perspective. And that's exactly what you get in extreme doses. As you can imagine this is perfect for paranoia, suspicion, uncertainty, confusion, and betrayal. In this film Lenny takes snapshots to remember who people are, where he now lives, his car, everything. He lives in snapshots of life his only form of memory is his Polaroid camera, just like in the excellent German film Wintersleepers also (partly) about a short-term memory disorder. He would have already forgotten the first sentence of this review. We see everything through Guy Pearce's characters' (Lenny) eyes, unfortunately he has no short-term memory so cannot form new memories. Nothing in this film is as it seems, and yet paradoxically everything is as it seems. You come out of the cinema questioning yourself, your memories, your truths. ![]() If I told you the entire plot of this film it really wouldn't matter as it is an exquisite paean to the subjectivity of memory and therefore is in itself ambiguous the truth' of it is up to you.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |