Book Review: The Philosophy of Martin Scorsese
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
5M ago
Martin Scorsese is an Academy Award-winning director and legendary filmmaker noted for his profound, character-driven stories and fascinating explorations of The post Book Review: The Philosophy of Martin Scorsese appeared first on Philosophy in Film ..read more
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Beautiful Faces (2024), Celebrating Dr. Larry Sargent & His Patients
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
9M ago
I’m not one to shy away from graphic content in films, but that most often applies when I know that everything is staged. Documentaries that have graphic content warnings are, in my mind, something else entirely. Director Dagan W. Beckett’s documentary film, Beautiful Faces, comes with multiple warnings throughout. This is because the film features real footage in a surgery room, where Dr. Larry Sargent meticulously works on children who have facial deformities or defects due to genetic abnormalities or trauma.  This is not to say that you shouldn’t watch the film, but I would be lying if ..read more
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Alleviate (2023), A Tragic & Poignant Short Film by Daniel Keeble
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
Grief is universal. Every single one of us has suffered the loss of a loved one — or will suffer it in the future. Despite its pervasiveness, grief is a complex emotion, one that’s not always easy to explain coherently. French philosopher and author Albert Camus began his 1976 essay, Losing a Loved One, “Losing a loved one, uncertainty about what we are, these are deprivations that give rise to our worst suffering.” It is this experience of loss and suffering that drives the narrative in writer/director Daniel Keeble’s short film, Alleviate (2023), an ARK Pictures production. However, it is th ..read more
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M. Butterfly (1993), A Timid Adaptation That Flattens the Real Story
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
I’m not sure how I came across the true love affair between French diplomat Bernard Boursicot and Chinese opera singer Shi Pei Pu, but it was a story so bizarre that I had to learn more. When I discovered that David Cronenberg had made a film adaptation of the story, M. Butterfly, I knew I had to see it. For the uninitiated, Boursicot was a French diplomat who fell in love with a Chinese opera singer, Shi Pei Pu, and believed that the opera singer was genetically female, when in fact Shi was a male who merely portrayed women on stage and used Boursicot to feed information to the Chinese govern ..read more
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No One Will Save You (2023), A Dialogue-Free Sci-Fi Horror Film
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
With the sheer volume of films coming out through streaming platforms, directors need a good hook to get anyone to notice them. In the case of No One Will Save You (2023), the hook is verbal minimalism. I wasn’t sitting there counting, but if I remember correctly, there were only 5 words of spoken dialogue in the entire film. Now, you might assume that this made the viewing experience a snooze fest. On the contrary, the film keeps a breakneck pace for nearly all of its 93-minute runtime. But as exciting as it may be, Brian Duffield’s No One Will Save You doesn’t take its dialogue-free script i ..read more
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Silent as the Grave (2023), A Unique Take On Murder Mysteries and Documentary Filmmaking
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
Silent as the Grave (2023), a film by Brad Podowski and Dan Gremley, offers a completely fresh take on a genre that has largely been played out in recent years. Neo-noir is, by default, a revamping of existing styles and genre tropes, yet this film does an excellent job of subverting expectations. Even if you set aside the fact that Silent as the Grave is a great technical achievement, especially as a low-budget indie project, it also does something that most genre films fail to do — it draws you into a totally unrelated experience. On the surface, the film is a tense, neo-noir, whodunit thril ..read more
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Nobody Knows (2004), A Beautiful Adaptation of a Real-Life Tragedy
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
Presenting filial solidarity (or lack thereof) in the face of obstacles is a popular theme in dramas, though it feels like a go-to component of Japanese cinema. Isao Takahata’s harrowing animated film, Grave of the Fireflies (1988), is perhaps the most notable example; an older brother fights to keep his little sister alive through war and chaos. Another is Spirited Away (2001), in which young Chihiro travels to a strange spirit world after her parents are mysteriously turned into pigs. Yet another is Kurosawa’s Shakespearean epic, Ran (1985), which tells the story of a crumbling clan that suc ..read more
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Jeanne du Barry (2023), A Boring and Pointless Historical Farce
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
Promotion for Jeanne du Barry (2023) was confusing from the start, as all of the posters and teasers featured the bloated, stoic face of Johnny Depp. As the film’s narration began in French, I wondered why Depp, an American with adequate but not altogether impressive abilities in the art of speaking French, would be cast as King Louis XV. But this is just the tip of the iceberg when questioning the many, many terrible decisions that went into Maïwenn’s tedious, directionless, and historically inaccurate recounting of the life of King Louis’ scandalous mistress, Madame du Barry.  It’s stra ..read more
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Review: Voyagers (2021), It’s Lord of the Flies In Space
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
I wish I could outdo the title of this review, but it really does summarize everything you need to know about Neil Burger’s Voyagers (2021). It takes a story that was already told by William Golding more than half a century ago and puts it…in space. Naturally, there are things to be appreciated about the film beyond its derivative plot. There are a few entertaining moments, I guess. The spaceship looks like what you might expect a spaceship to look like in the year 2063. The special effects aren’t bad enough to draw viewers out of the film. And, perhaps most importantly, it gives Lily-Rose Dep ..read more
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The Coronating (2023), A Beautiful, Surreal, and Frightening Guilt Trip
Philosophy in Film
by Matthew Jones
1y ago
It’s no small feat to make a short film look good. Most young filmmakers simply don’t have the budget or the expertise to make the mechanics of cinematography, lighting, and staging work together to create something really beautiful to look at. This is part of the reason I was so taken aback when I began watching Justin Solaiman and Hudson King’s surrealist fantasy short, The Coronating (2023). But once I got past the initial shock of such a visually-captivating short film, I could enjoy a 20-minute story that managed to pack a lot of big ideas into a small, digestible package.  As a piec ..read more
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