Come anticipate David Fincher's "Zodiac"

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holy shit morbz

you are not allowed to have opinions about movies

and what, Monday, 25 February 2008 20:56 (sixteen years ago) link

No, he's right. Long and boring.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 20:57 (sixteen years ago) link

who the fuck are you?

and what, Monday, 25 February 2008 20:58 (sixteen years ago) link

no, it's good. But one just-good murder film is interchangeable with another.

Dr Morbius, Monday, 25 February 2008 20:59 (sixteen years ago) link

all this time i just thought you were acting like a slow 17 yr old, i didnt know you actually were one

and what, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:01 (sixteen years ago) link

seconded

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:02 (sixteen years ago) link

one just-good murder film is interchangeable with another

-- Morbius

Exactly. Which is to say boring at three hours, unless you have some specific interest in the case or detective stories in general. I don't.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:02 (sixteen years ago) link

Nice clothes, though.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:02 (sixteen years ago) link

this movie is not a "murder film"

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:03 (sixteen years ago) link

i ... think ... i agree with morbius ... in spite of disliking fc

remy bean, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:04 (sixteen years ago) link

that was the corniest turd i evah passed

remy bean, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:04 (sixteen years ago) link

no, it's good. But one just-good murder film is interchangeable with another.

I thought that about No Country for Old Men more than this one, which had the historical/journo angles.

Eazy, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:04 (sixteen years ago) link

hamlet, clue, weekend and bernie's, all the same really

gff, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:05 (sixteen years ago) link

^KLASSIK SHIT^

Not if you want to pirouette around it with "limits of our knowledge" crap, Shakey, no.

Dr Morbius, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:05 (sixteen years ago) link

shit tell me which murder films are like zodiac because i want to see them

omar little, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:06 (sixteen years ago) link

otm

caek, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:09 (sixteen years ago) link

there's what, like 8, 9 minutes of actual murdering in this?

and what, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:12 (sixteen years ago) link

I don't get it. What was so great about it? Camerawork was really slick, but kinda distracting. Nice cinematography. Snappy color coordination on the set decoration, but it seemed overdone and (worse) meaningless to me. I gather we were supposed to see the main character being "consumed" by this insoluble case the way Downey was, but that didn't come through at all. Puppy dog hero seemed inward and obsessive from day one and Downey a predictable drug/booze casualty. Pat ending where the killer's identity is finally settled felt cheap: seriously undercut the film's most interesting themes. What's to love? Period detail? Painstaking re-creation?

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:16 (sixteen years ago) link

^^^ ban

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:17 (sixteen years ago) link

I'd say its genre is the procedural

ryan, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:19 (sixteen years ago) link

Except for the parts that aren't. Like 50+% of it.

Alex in SF, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:20 (sixteen years ago) link

its genre is the procedural

Yeah, but w/ journalists instead of cops. If you allow a broad definition, with some context & character stuff that isn't related to the case at hand.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:22 (sixteen years ago) link

that's not really a genre, is it?

i don't think with stuff developed outside studio development departs by name-directors that 'genre' is that useful a category. sure in a way this is a "procedural detective film," but it's not in a genre in the way films were under the studio system, when they were done on a factory basis.

(this isn't to privilege fincher's MO, over, say, the system that produced the noir genre in the 1940s; i'm just saying.)

xpost

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:23 (sixteen years ago) link

It's interesting that the movie that contenderizer is describing sounds virtually nothing like the one I watched.

Alex in SF, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:23 (sixteen years ago) link

Are you saying that the film wasn't about a character being consumed by an investigation, or that it didn't attempt to provide a solution to its own puzzle (killer's identity)?

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:25 (sixteen years ago) link

Maybe. Not sure I'd agree about as much as 50%

I guess part of what makes it great to me is how it manages to investigate or even "deconstruct" (sorry) itself and its genre without sacrificing any pleasure. Its an extremely satisfying film.

Xposts

ryan, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:26 (sixteen years ago) link

the movie that contenderizer is describing sounds virtually nothing like the one I watched

-- Alex

But, yeah, I get that a lot.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:26 (sixteen years ago) link

Ryan: How does it deconstruct the genre? How is it anything but what it seems on the surface?

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:27 (sixteen years ago) link

I posted a bunch of stuff upthread about the movie's many references to media/film and the attendant distortions involved, which is really the primary focus of the movie (with the "message" being perhaps something like the harder you look for the truth the more you obscure it ... or something). There's a link that explores the same ideas upthread as well that was very illuminating in this respect. This movie is about obsession, and about how obsession is ultimately blinding and self-destructive.

and no the movie does not "solve" the killer's identity in any meaningful way. its no coincidence that the film appears to condemn a character that it explicitly states is innocent (the "this movie is based on actual case files" canard at the beginning, the text at the end about DNA evidence exoneration, etc.)

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:28 (sixteen years ago) link

I would try to defend that statement but I'm typing on my phone here! Hopefully I can later...but I wouldn't be surprised if someone beat me to it.

ryan, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:29 (sixteen years ago) link

The title and the code motifs are especially interesting I think for fancy ass readings of the movie

ryan, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:32 (sixteen years ago) link

i love that the killer is played by different actors in each murder scene.

latebloomer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:36 (sixteen years ago) link

I think you're overstating the film's concluding text, Shakey. All that's said is that DNA could not match Allen to the letters. He was by no means exonerated by the DNA evidence. And I think the film comes very close to fingering him. Emotionally, at least, it gives our hero a moment where he can "look the killer the eye" and know that he knows. Which, given the realities of the case, is by far the most upbeat, standard-heroic conclusion possible.

I just didn't see the distortion-by-media angle as being explored in an interesting way by the film. Distortion by looking to hard for something that might not, in fact, be there, maybe. As far as revisionist detection goes, I think this pales next to OG 70s stuff like "The Conversation" and "Night Moves".

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:37 (sixteen years ago) link

"I think you're overstating the film's concluding text, Shakey. All that's said is that DNA could not match Allen to the letters. He was by no means exonerated by the DNA evidence."

It's pretty far from slam dunk. Plus the ID itself is so suspect, so incredible seeming. Far from being conclusive OHMIGOD he did it, it's more OHMIGOD what an endless wild goose chase.

Alex in SF, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:45 (sixteen years ago) link

Fair enough. I don't want to beat this to death. It just left me a bit cold.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:48 (sixteen years ago) link

there are numerous other things in the film pointing to Allen's innocence - lack of match with the handwriting sample, etc.

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:49 (sixteen years ago) link

I'll watch it again at some point. Too many people have insisted to me that it's better than I think. And maybe I'll come around.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:51 (sixteen years ago) link

shakey has inside knowledge

remy bean, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:51 (sixteen years ago) link

the film says he's "guilty" because Graysmith WANTS him so badly to be guilty - at the same time the film contains a number of elements implicitly stating that the film is not trustworthy (three different actors in the killing scenes, the note at the beginning and then the confession that the "actual case files" were destroyed, the constantly shifting evidence, etc.)

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:52 (sixteen years ago) link

And I think the film comes very close to fingering him. Emotionally, at least, it gives our hero a moment where he can "look the killer the eye" and know that he knows.

haha i interpreted this totally differently!!

max, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:54 (sixteen years ago) link

the scene in the basement is key, i think. as least as far as gyllenhaal's character goes.

latebloomer, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:57 (sixteen years ago) link

^^^yes

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:57 (sixteen years ago) link

that scene bothered me at first - because it seems so non-germane to the rest of the case - but then that's part of the point; its given this really creepy trad-horror-movie-surprise-reveal staging but then... nothing comes of it. Guy is just a harmless film buff. Graysmith is a totally paranoid obsessive who sees clues everywhere.

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 25 February 2008 21:59 (sixteen years ago) link

I get that. I could see that the movie was setting itself up as a gray-area exploration of our need to find solutions to unanswerable questions. And Graysmith hardly seemed entirely reliable. That's why I was so bugged by what I saw as the fairly straightforward solution offered at the conclusion. I'm not saying it was unambiguous, mind, but I though it was presented as something we might find at least 2/3 convincing. Not strong enought to hold up in court, but good enough to serve in the absence of verifiable truth.

Like I said, though, I need to watch it again.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 22:02 (sixteen years ago) link

That is, I accept that I may be wrong about this.

contenderizer, Monday, 25 February 2008 22:03 (sixteen years ago) link

ive only seen it once but i will say that i didnt interpret the "fingering" scene as at all conclusive or final

max, Monday, 25 February 2008 22:06 (sixteen years ago) link

there was fingering in this movie? talk about subtext!

latebloomer, Monday, 25 February 2008 22:36 (sixteen years ago) link

sorry:(

latebloomer, Monday, 25 February 2008 22:42 (sixteen years ago) link

<i>Not strong enought to hold up in court, but good enough to serve in the absence of verifiable truth.</i>

i think is IS what the movie is about..ie, the distinction between metaphysical certainty and we can indeed "know" (and what is problematic about our knowledge).

That Graysmith's moment at the end can be interpreted as either a transcendent confirmation of his suspicions or as the desperate grasping of an obsessive is to the film's credit...and what I like is that it suggests that these two things are not mutually exclusive...and may even depend upon each other!

this is basically the problem of modernity...how does one obtain certainty in situation that only permits probabilities? how do you reconcile this with any sense of justice?

ryan, Monday, 25 February 2008 22:52 (sixteen years ago) link


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