The camera need not exist within the world. It merely allows for the representation of things that are in the mind, either memory or imagination or thoughts, etc. Tracing the history of the universe can be done in a mind without a camera - it can be done within a film without the camera being 'diegetic'. That the camera represents it does not mean that the camera exists within that representation.drakula wrote:I agree with you, but only in half, because:
1. Malick does attempt to be omniscient, at least in the scale of the film. If the film were just about the 50's family, I might completely agree with you. But he positions the camera as being there from the beginning of time through prehistoric life. He does try to relate/compare his individual existence to the infinite breadth of nature. My question is why aren't other human beings included in this breadth? Aren't other human beings part of nature too? I see the film as attempting a totalizing view of history (which is problematic in itself, and extremely outdated in our postmodern world), except that this 'totality' seems myopic, solipsistic, which brings me to the next point-
Your extra questions have nothing to do with the film, again. As for the possible film - what would more humans have to add that more of everything hasn't already added? If it's about one particular experience it's not about the entire universe - that much is established BY the inclusion of the universe - and thus it's not about those other people, inclusively. Thus, they are there, implicitly, and need not be there explicitly for the same point. The film certainly doesn't do much history. It does a bit of imagination, a bit of memory, a bit of ideas, certainly no history. Malick is not positing that a dinosaur actually behaved as the dinosaur in the film behaved at any point in time. To take something like that and infer 'a totalizing view of history' is pretty absurd, if you ask me. It's at best implicit, which means your assumptions are at best guesses (which, to me, is a poor way to evaluate art), and at worst absurd (I say both). If it is so ridiculous to you - why assume that it is the case? Or why pay attention? Searching for some construct (of your own creation) to take issue with will result in a lot of issues - and no gain, I don't think.
Grief cannot be attempted to be understood? Well, anyway, if you want to cordon off all attempts at philosophy and art based on preconceptions that's fine and dandy, I don't see why you need to discuss here that which you say cannot interestingly be discussed.drakula wrote:2. He has attempted before to relate individual experience to people of other cultures in his previous films (The New World/The Thin Red Line). Although you understand from the get-go that his portrayal of indigenous people is squarely within his limited point-of-view (contemporary white middle-class male perspective), there is an attempt to reach outside his limited perspective. I may not necessarily agree with that portrayal, but at least it was an attempt to relate himself to tangible issues. The problem I see in this film is this: again, he relates individual experience to something he cannot fully understand (Time/religion), but I am just uninterested in seeing a film so dedicated to something we truly cannot fully understand, as compared to something we can at least attempt to understand (other people) - through discourse. It's just like the opening quote of the film- Job can never understand God's intentions- the people demand answers from God, but God never answers. At least in other people, we can expect an answer, although we know fully well that these answers never tell the full truth.
You should probably ask, "Why does Malick follow what he does follow" before skipping ahead to the irrelevant stuff not in the film. Once you're done with the previous, I think it's best to stop. The film is not what is not in the film.drakula wrote:why doesn't Malick show the future at all? (I don't see the ending as visions of the future) Again it seems to confirm for me that he views History as a totality culminating in Sean Penn's character. There is no future in this film or, at least, the future matters a lot less than the past (his past). At least in 2001: A Space Odyssey (another film that I dislike immensely, but for other reasons), Kubrick attempts a vision of the future (no matter how cheesy it may look)...