Escapay wrote:Prince Ali wrote:Tonight some friends and I put on our costumes and went to the movies. We saw Saw III and it was the most disgusting movie I've ever seen in my life! Whoever wrote that has serious issues...and I mean SERIOUS.
Then you'd better step away from "Salo".
Agreed. Anyone who would be offended by a movie like
that has no right watching it in the first place. And remember, the Saw series is honestly
Pop gross-out / disgusting and there is a level to which one can experience the real thing.
And yes,
Prince Ali, do remember to check out Salo - the 120 Days of Sodom before you've quite had the last say on Saw III. I think you'd probably change your mind for certain in the first 10-15 minutes. In fact, I still think A Clockwork Orange is technically more disturbing than any Saw movie.
as for the last movie I saw - I watched Safe (1995, Julianne Moore) yesterday evening... I am sort of in awe. Because it's half a great movie and half a pretty bad one. The movie is about a housewife who gets an illness that her doctor and psychiatrist can't find or tell what it is. Their tests say she is completely healthy, but she is having head pains, nose bleeds, vomiting, long coughing spells, and wheezing attacks. But she sees a flyer at her gym that automatically describes her symptoms and goes to a new doctor only to find out that she has a brand new affliction called Environmental Illness / Chemical Sensitivity. So now she has to change her entire life to protect herself from chemical attacks from gasses and chemically manifactured fragrences. However, she ends up in the hospital when she walks into her Drycleaners and they're spraying for something. In the hospital she sees a TV commercial for an Institution for Chemically Sensitive People called Wrenwood, where she can go to isolate herself in a completely chemical-free environment where she can learn about other people with Chemical Sensitivity and have counseling for the illness, recharge herself, and hopefully learn to cope in the Outside world of total chemical.
However, when she gets there and takes her first class, she learns that... no one really sort of leaves the institution, except dead. The Institution is a lot like a cult that has an entire life philosophy related to their illness. The 'inmates' basically either breakdown emotionally or they become just like the man who runs the institution, Peter Dunning (?), who is a lot like an actual cult leader, convincing the people at Wrenwood that they are only "Safe" while inside the institution, a place where there are also no smoking (??? - that's a chemical, isn't it? Goes without saying, I think), alcohol, drugs, crime, or promiscuous sex, while he keeps reminding them that the outside world is "sinful" and "doom" obsessed so they sort of get paranoid about the thought of ever leaving. All this while, Carol (Julianne Moore) who got sick and went to Wrenwood, she begins feeling sicker but loving the insitution while completely focusing on relocating her "Safe space" at the institution to an Igloo that one of the Dead chemically sensitives had built to isolate himself completely - it's a death sentence because the person is only Safe inside if no one else sets foot inside. Peter the cult leader is also busy telling the people there that they got sick because they wanted to and made themselves sick by being weak.
But none of this can be at all confirmed - because once she gets to Wrenwood for the movie's last 45-50 minutes, every scene has 2 different meanings and 2 completely different tones. This place may be a Cult, maybe not. The movie looks at it all very lovingly while some of Carol's expressions hint that she is honestly horrified to be there at times. At any rate, nothing really makes sense that last 45-50 minutes and the movie pretty much sucks from then on unless you love institution movies, are interested in new age philosophies, or enjoy watching boring movies with almost absolutely no point whatsoever. This is my first experience with filmmaker Todd Haynes, and I think I can SAFEly say, it will also be my last.