Bear with me-- what important political statement is United 93 making, a new and original critique of the Bush administration? More importantly, can you really see this film as having a message that supersedes its exploitive nature? To me this is like debating over Starship Troopers, it doesn't matter if you consider it entertainment or high art, it functions as the former. One of the most important questions United 93 raises, incidentally I imagine, is whether it is OK for a film to have control over an audience where half are willing to believe what they see, to invest emotion in fictional characters... in this case, hiding behind pieces of facts and the blessings of real families. Saving Private Ryan did this, but it was made by a different generation; it didn't throw salt on wounds which Greengrass' film does, intentional or not-- it's a move that is nothing but exploitive. Not only that but there's some perverse sorrow some people unconsciously indulge in when close tragic events are displayed in a dramatic fashion, which is anything but progressive.filmnoir1 wrote:Are not all works of art a type of exploitation in one way or another? Was Oscar Wilde's send-up of the British aristocracy (The Importance of Being Earnest) not in effect a political statement that has since become part of the English literary canon?
On the contrary, commercial art is the best means of creating a subversive argument-- which is another reason why this movie fails, for if it had a message, people would be talking about more than "how real it all was."filmnoir1 wrote:Is it possible that we believe that art must not be commercial in order for it to be viable as a means of subversive argument?
I admit that I can't wrap my head around all that you are saying, but whether that's my fault or yours isn't the issue. In today's post-modern world that you describe, where works of art can be made, destroyed, edited, appropriated all in the same day and then repeated the next-- I think there are still limits, that questions from one's conscience aren't simply restrictions in the search for greater truth. It's not even a question of morality as much as it is a question of is this good art-- good art is never wrong, it proves itself to be right-- Manet's work caused a stir back in the day, painting nude women just for the sake of it while pointing out the hypocrisy in the rest of society. Today we can see truth in his work, I don't believe we'll be able to say the same about this Greengrass film in a few years. Today it may be seen as right, but time will prove that it is wrong after the shock wears off.
If I come off as confrontational I don't mean to be, I think this film brings up very important questions that deserve more discussion than between the few of us here on this message board.