BLACK COMEDY
I think Black Comedy should be listed under this movie's genre. It's more that than anything else. It's definitely not a drama. It's a Black Comedy/Mystery.
April151CT
I think Black Comedy should be listed under this movie's genre. It's more that than anything else. It's definitely not a drama. It's a Black Comedy/Mystery.
April151CT
The only thing I found even vaguely comical was her over-the-top pathology.
shareThen you missed the satire on marriage. I started laughing my ass off when the movie switched to the scene of Amy throwing her frilly pens out of the car, while she described why she was framing her husband for murder simply because he was a lazy schlub and continued laughing until the end of the film. That scene was when the movie switched genres and went from thriller to satire/farce.
shareI did the same thing too. I was watching the first-half intrigued by the mystery, and when the big twist came around, I started laughing in astonishment, knowing that the $10 I spent on this movie was worth it all. And that's what happened, I was laughing at the moments when she was puppeteering the circumstances around her for her plans, I just love how clever she really is at planning things with such detail and patience. Boy, she really *beep* Nick over.
shareYeah, I thought it was fairly obvious - and I remain surprised that so many people seem to have missed it (and I suspect Fincher/Flynn were surprised too). I guess the fact that his 'Girl with a Dragon Tattoo' immediately preceded this (and not 'Fight Club'), had people convinced to try to force this into the "serious thriller" genre.
Some of the scenes are so obviously over-the-top (e.g. the "interrogation" of Amy at the hospital by a jam-packed room of kowtowing FBI officials; the blood-soaked Amy "fainting" in Nick's arms in front of a sea of paparazzi, etc) that it's bizarre to see people arguing about how "full of plot holes" the movie is.
I think no one discusses those parts because they already lost interest by that point...
shareDon't be such a pretentious prick. I think there's no one who didn't miss the shift in tone. That doesn't mean it's appropriate or good. In fact, changing the tone of your movie halfway is a bad thing.
shareI have to disagree that a change in tone halfway through is a bad thing. "Jaws", for instance, would not be considered a classic if the tone didn't change from realistic to mythic halfway through, and a million adventure films work because the tone changes from fun adventure to serious life-and-death struggle halfway through. Like maybe "The Magnificent Seven" or "The Dirty Dozen" to name some classics?
I don't know if the change in "Gone Girl" works that well, though. Because to me, it was not so much a change from serious to darkly comic, but a change from the Scott Peterson case to "you weren't expecting the Scott Peterson case to turn out like this!".
I don't recall a major tone shift in Jaws, to be honest. I don't really consider the climax and its build-up a tone shift. They're facing the bad guy, so to speak, so of course the last act is going to be big. It feels quite natural in Jaws, the tension grows and grows.
The tone shift in Gone Girl, on the other hand, is something else. A dead serious thriller suddenly turns into an unfunny spoof.
Absolutely, but the problem is that the real twist of the film (which flies over the head of the majority of IMDB commentators) is that it switches gear from thriller to satire/farce - and it's supposed to surprise you (and delight you) when it does that. But most people here seem to remain painfully oblivious to it.
If you list it as a Satire in the genre, the twist will be spoiled for prospective viewers.
Spare me your high-flown intellectual pretentions. Any moron could have seen what was coming. I've never been less surprised in my life. What else were they going to do for the next hour? But then, I guess there were those that were painfully oblivious to it.
You've seen one gimmicky M Night Shyamalan knockoff, you've seen 'em all.
Spare me your high-flown intellectual pretentions.
Any moron could have seen what was coming. I've never been less surprised in my life.
You've seen one gimmicky M Night Shyamalan knockoff, you've seen 'em all.
Thanks for reinforcing you're a pretentious prick who doesn't understand good satire.
shareYou are absolutely right. The audience in the theater when I saw it was laughing their arses off. If you don't understand that it is really a comedy, the movie is going over your head!
shareThe FBI/police interview at the end is definitely comedy. I laughed so hard. Sad part was it was supposed to be taken seriously. I hope the book wasn't this silly.
And don't tell me that was intentional. I think the director messed up the tone here.
No, that scene was supposed to be funny.
shareIt was most definitely intentional. The movie is a spoof, not a serious drama.
April151CT
Good comment. I love black comedies, but a lot of people don't get it. I love when supposedly normal people are stuck in bizarre situations. After Hours is a fave, yet totally unlike Gone Girl. Not sure if I would have concluded it's a black comedy w/o someone mentioning it, but it has that funny energy. I often catch myself cackling at the TV because so much stuff seems so improbable, but in a good way. Like cops who have to foot chase some perp, and the perp may be in just as good shape as the cop. Maybe he puts the shake on the cop, and the cop just has to keep on going, and I'll laugh at the poor guy. He'd probably like to call it good and hope the other guy gets caught some other time.
shareIt's a blacker than black comedy on par with Shallow Grave.
shareIt gets funnier to me with each viewing. Great movie.
shareI also found myself laughing at times . Ben really nails his chracter. I feel he must have related a lot to the character. Men can be funny. Even in the most horrid situations
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