To keep the ball rolling, I must side with your opinion on this one.
This is the second movie I've watched this year, which left me questioning whether I was missing something and I had just actually watched a masterpiece, or that the movie was really what I felt it was - pretentious, boring and not that good overall.
I forgot what was the other movie (probably a Cronenberg feature), as it obviously had no impact on me, but I do remember that, right after I had watched it, I came to forums and reviews looking for this "something" I could have missed or not understood, which would make it an at least good movie, instead of a pretentious waste of time.
Then, like now, I read comments from people that liked it, arguing similarly:
1- Fans of action movies and today's over-the-top Hollywood blockbusters are unable to see beauty in cinema as Art, rather than Entertainment.
2- The boredom you feel while watching it, or the mechanical emotions of the characters (or complete lack of perceivable emotions) are on purpose, meant to cause on the spectator the same sense of boredom experienced by the characters.
3- Not all stories told have to be epics, or not all movies being made have to leave a lasting impression on viewers.
My counter-arguments are:
1- I completely agree with the premise of the statement, but I don't think it applies here. A lot of people think Gladiator is one of the best movies ever made. While I concede that it was great on many technical aspects, the storyline, the characters and the whole premise is, to me, nearly as dumb as those on Battleship (that one with Rihanna). But these would be logical fallacies to both imply that every movie which is not ostensibly Entertainment is ipso facto Artistic Cinema, and also that every movie made with an artsy mindset is automatically a good one. Let's not forget Soderbergh has no beef against Entertainment cinema - much to the contrary. Lars von Trier and Wes Anderson are good examples that come to my mind when I think of directors that were able to make both terribly good and terribly bad Artistic cinema.
2- If that is the truth, that the filmmakers wanted to convey the sense of boredom and lack of emotions of their characters, well... mission accomplished! I live quite a uneventful life (and I like it this way), so I wouldn't mind seeing some twists and turns when I watch a movie. Then again, other filmmakers have managed to do the exact same thing, i.e. transport the characters' emotions (or lack thereof) to the audiences, while still delivering great movies. Kubrick would succesfully replicate the mindsets of a paranoid military officer or a tortured prisoner, Hitchcock would lock us up in an apartment for the whole movie to allow us the same sense of desperation of his characters... In other words, it's OK to make us feel like the characters, in this case, bored and emotionless. But that could be done in a way that the movie itself does not end up being boring and emotionless (and I see that, for many people, this movie was neither. It didn't work for me though).
3- Sure, not all movies have to be good. Not all money has to be spent in a responsible way. Not every story has to leave a lasting impression on the people these stories are told to. That's my point (and more importantly, my personal opinion, which I don't want everybody to agree on) - this is not a good movie, and the story is dull. I won't say the money spent on it was wasted, as I believe the change of environment was probably good for Sasha.
I have nothing against Soderbergh, or in favor. I really liked Che: Part One and Traffic, probably as much as I hated Magic Mike and Solaris (even though I love sci-fi). I think pornography and prostitution are fascinating subjects, and we could use some more good movies about them. But since the porn made in the US was never (and still is not) quite as good as the porn made in Italy and France, I think it's likely that great, serious movies about it will probably come from these countries, too.
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