Tuesday, March 20, 2012

George Ilutsik_Final essay

George Ilutsik
World Cinema
Final
03/20/12

Terry Gilliam

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas:

            Grabbing your attention is an element that Gilliam seems to do effortlessly.  In the first minuet of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas I was instantly intrigued in why the main character was trying to catch imaginary bats.  My hopes where now a bar higher.  His style, art, and philosophy shine through out the film. 
            As I have only seen “Monty Python and the Holy Grail,” it was nice to see similar aspects in Fear and Loathing.  There is only one word to describe his style, and it would be underlying.  Another would be contradictory.  And another would be convoluted incessant impressionism.  Therefore, his style is contradictory & convoluted.  If you followed that then you would enjoy the ride Gilliam takes you with Depp in Vegas.
            You see many instances where characters contradict themselves.  When Depp states that there is no way to tell the fear he is feeling while on drugs, and he continues to express how everything around him is terrifying.   Or the fact that they are at an anti drug seminar and they themselves are drug users. 
            I think he wants us to wonder if what he is showing is fantasy or reality.  He will commonly show something that is outrageous and fiction, and then give a small hint that maybe what we are seeing is real.  Again with the bat scene.  We figure that everything Depp is seeing is in his head, but then Gilliam gives a singshot of a dead bat on the side of the road.  I would say this is where is personality comes out. 
            Where I perceive to be the second act, is Depp waking up to his hotel room in a huge mess.  Everything is out of place and dirty.  He eventually listens to a tape recorder that is hanging around his neck.  From the sounds he starts to remember fragments of the night before.  And this is Gilliam’s impression of the whole film.  Everything is just one long memory of Depp’s character in Las Vegas.  I see the tape recorder as a symbol of this. 
            Overall this I would say is his best piece of art.  It looks great and it is full of his style and personality.  But there is no underlying meaning.  If there was I didn’t find it. 

Twelve Monkeys:

            Another aspect is the surrealism that he brings to his films.  The constant thought of wondering if what we are seeing is reality or fiction keeps our attention.  In the beginning of Twelve Monkeys we understand that Bruce is in a futuristic world.  But what we did not expect is to see a bear, or a lion roaming around a once populated city.  Yet it could be believable. 
            At first we think that Bruce’s character is half crazy.  Elements that support this is the scene where he is washed both in the future, and in the mental hospital.  Both shots are similar and hint that maybe everything is just in his head.  It is not until we see physical proof of him in different time eras that we are totally sure that he is time traveling.             
            The fact that the twelve monkey sign is covered with music posters might be referring to the fact that we ignore certain issues.  Brad’s character states that we are all monkeys.  His hidden agenda was only to free the animals.  His monkey chanting in the end doesn’t help either. 
            In the end I believe what is trying to be said is that we will destroy ourselves in the end.  It is human nature that will undo us all. 

Work cited



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