I am one woman who hates 'chick flicks'. Give me a good sci-fi film, or a good crime mystery and I am happy.
Only sexually insecure men dismiss movies because they are "chick flicks".
Only sexually insecure men dismiss movies because they are "chick flicks".
Only sexually insecure men dismiss movies because they are "chick flicks".
No, chick flicks just suck ass.
That's called artistic license. It's been going on since the Greeks.
That understood, I would not set Titanic up as some kind of example of historical accuracy.
I admit it is not my kind of movie. I don't know what '30s-'40s movies you have in mind for comparison, but Titanic is very much a product of the youth-marketed blockbuster era, as opposed to the A-pictures of the earlier period which were aimed squarely at adult audiences. There is nary a note of understatement or subtlety to be found in Titanic, and the dialogue and characterization, compared to, say, Gone With the Wind, are pretty clearly not in the same league IMO.Titanic's a very old school Hollywood production, the sort of thing that would (minus the modern special effects) have been extremely popular in the 1930s-1940s: big budget melodrama set against an historical backdrop. As a melodrama, it's done very well.
--Justin
That's called artistic license. It's been going on since the Greeks.
That understood, I would not set Titanic up as some kind of example of historical accuracy.
I admit it is not my kind of movie. I don't know what '30s-'40s movies you have in mind for comparison, but Titanic is very much a product of the youth-marketed blockbuster era, as opposed to the A-pictures of the earlier period which were aimed squarely at adult audiences. There is nary a note of understatement or subtlety to be found in Titanic, and the dialogue and characterization, compared to, say, Gone With the Wind, are pretty clearly not in the same league IMO.Titanic's a very old school Hollywood production, the sort of thing that would (minus the modern special effects) have been extremely popular in the 1930s-1940s: big budget melodrama set against an historical backdrop. As a melodrama, it's done very well.
--Justin
Where is the subtlety in Gone with the Wind?
Titanic found a huge audience among girls and young women, but it was definitely not conceived as a "youth-oriented blockbuster" - for starters, Hollywood doesn't target blockbusters at young women, as a matter of course (certainly not to the budget they gave it, even before cost overruns). It was a huge success across all demographics (it would have to be, to earn the kind of money it did).
Dialogue isn't Cameron's strong suit, to be sure, but the characterization is quite effective, if heavily based in archtypes. Like I said, melodrama. Not to everyone's taste, but it's a legitimate genre.
Where is the subtlety in Gone with the Wind?
It's rather ridiculous to compare Billy Zane's character to a mustache-twirling villain, given that for most of the film he acts exactly as a man in his place and time generally -would- act...unless the implication is that most men during that time period were mustache-twirling villains.
I would assume that's why he said "for most of the film".Most men in that time traveled around with personal hitmen whom they would send to frame or kill romantic rivals? That's certainly news to me.It's rather ridiculous to compare Billy Zane's character to a mustache-twirling villain, given that for most of the film he acts exactly as a man in his place and time generally -would- act...unless the implication is that most men during that time period were mustache-twirling villains.
Cal certainly does go a bit crazy by the end of the film, but at least until the point where he hits Rose he's not exactly atypical for his period. And even that, while certainly deplorable, isn't exactly the act of a mustache-twirler.
That's called artistic license. It's been going on since the Greeks.
Titanic's a very old school Hollywood production, the sort of thing that would (minus the modern special effects) have been extremely popular in the 1930s-1940s: big budget melodrama set against an historical backdrop. As a melodrama, it's done very well.
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