Have You Ever Felt Like a Film was Made Specifically For You?
Are you willing to admit it?
Photo: Sony Pictures Classics
Over the weekend I received a fantastic email from a RopeofSilicon reader telling me how much they enjoyed Charlie Kaufman's directorial debut Synecdoche, New York. The email was filled with reasons why they found the film so enjoyable, and even though it is a film I did not particularly enjoy it gave me pause. It made me think about the film and even made me consider giving it a second chance. There was one sentence in the email that brought it all home for me and it went like this:
Maybe your life needs to be in chaos, or your worldview uncertain, or be a particular age, but I felt as if Charlie went to all this trouble to create a movie just for me.
I replied to this email saying this was an excellent way to look at a film and to realize love for a film. This person wasn't painting the film into a corner as much as opening up possibilities as to who may like it and why, and how someone could potentially share in their experience. The reason stories are told are to open up connections. We begin relating to film through the connections we find in them and our own lives.
I have heard of people breaking up with their girlfriend/boyfriend and then happening upon Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind the day after. Such an experience allowed for them to have a unique and personal connection to a film no one else will have. Sharing it may allow others to find the same connection.
Photo: Criterion Collection
I recently watched Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru, which I enjoyed, but didn't particularly love as the film ended. It came as a part of my Essential Art House: 50 Years of Janus Films from Criterion and included in the collection is a book with an essay on each film. I flipped to the page for Ikiru and after reading the final sentence everything clicked and I don't think I will ever watch a film about death the same way again. It read:
After asking the question "Where do we go when we die?" the director can only respond that there is one place for certain: the memory of others.
I had never looked at death like this and it is an idea I will carry with me forever, in life as well as with films. It gave me an entirely new appreciation for the film I would have never had if someone had not put it into words. Sometimes people are afraid to admit these things or share them, but what good is a connection if it is not shared? Perhaps you are an atheist and believe this life is it and there isn't any more, or perhaps you believe in God and only thought of life after death in terms of Heaven and Hell. Either way, the quote above has to affect you in some way. It opens doors to a whole new thought process without destroying your original beliefs and for me it was an absolute revelation.
In our travels we also come across films that allow us to escape into a world unlike our own, perhaps even a world you desire for yourself one day. Before Sunset is a film I absolutely get lost in. I find myself consumed in the words and atmosphere of the picture. Another film I connect with wholly is Fellini's 8 1/2. Guido's confusion and search for answers in that film are relatable to everyone, and I find a specific connection to his plight. Of course there is also last year's The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, a film I have already talked so much about I won't bore you with any further details you can't already get right here or here.
Truly great films are films that manage to tap into what makes us who we are and every so often a movie can manage to help us with that definition. These films don't have to be the agreed upon "classics" or Oscar Best Picture winners. When someone talks about their favorite movies it's not always enough to simply know the title because movies hold different meanings for everyone. It's the power film has over us and it's what makes going to the theater worthwhile. It's the reason Vicky Cristina Barcelona was my favorite film of 2008 and the reason films such as Nine and Whatever Works are on my list of most anticipated films of 2009. It's also the reason I won't be surprised if a film I haven't even heard of yet makes my top ten at the end of the year. That's what makes watching movies so enthralling, but now it is your turn…
Do you have a film that holds special meaning for you? Do you care to share? Don't be shy. Remember, this is the Internet, the home of anonymous comments.










