Saturday night I went to see
Pan's Labyrinth with friends. While all of us had wanted to see it, I think the other couple were extremely shell-shocked by it when we came out, so it wasn't until the car ride home with
icajoleu that we were able to really talk about the movie.
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Anyways. What I really liked about it was the way the fae world clashed with the real world -- the way she couldn't save her mother, the mandarake baby shrivelling in the fire, the scene where she disobeys and eats the food and a faery dies for her sake. And then the end, where she has to die in order to reenter the fae world. I thought it was because she could only exist in one world, that she couldn't be princess and human both, but she could take the lessons she'd learned as a human girl and apply those to the faery world.
All in all, I didn't find it that dark personally, but then that might be because I tend to read much darker fairy tales? ^^;; The ending seemed a bit too happy to me, it feels a bit like a hollywood ending, a bit discordant with the dimness of the rest of the story.
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Ah, but is there always a reward at the end of a fairy tale? If you look at the Grimm Tales, and other Myths, a lot of those are meant to serve as warnings, and with Mercede's note about not trusting fawns, I sort of thought that was setting up for a desolate kind of ending.
^^;; Ah, well. There isn't really any place around here playing it anyways.
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In any case, I agree with you, though, that most films I've seen by Latin American (and Spanish) directors are usually beautifully filmed - City of God is a good example of a dark-themed film that is just gorgeously filmed and tells such an amazing, visceral and haunting story.
And regarding the fic - of course! For you, I'm happy to help out! I'm at gmail by this name, so feel free to send along. Right now I'm a bit frantic trying to finish up my massive WIP before I go to Holland (we'll see if this actually happens - the fic finishing before I leave, I mean), but I'm glad to brainstorm/whatever with you, especially for a 'verse that I love so much! :D
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I'm very excited now!
And god, the fact that I'm even considering doing this is making my brain melt.
Heee, I understand completely! You know what's crazy for me? I'm writing this epic fic, and I already have AU ficlets/fics in mind for the 'verse. And I'm trying to save them until this is done, but man, that's haaaard. And I feel like a total loon to even consider writing AU to my own AU 'verse. How weird is that? So, I'm impressed and glad that you are considering doing what you're doing. :)
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Yes, it is harsh - I felt like a masochist for going back to see it again, but I just could not get the film out of my head the days following my first viewing. I haven't had a movie experience this visceral in a long time - it stirred up every kind of emotion in me (including a fierce, fierce hatred for Vidal), and the themes resonated with me more personally than I expected. I loved Ofelia - the young actress who played her delivered such a nuanced and believable performance. What a talent.
Speaking of things I can't get out of my head - that lullaby that Mercedes sings, and the way it is woven throughout the rest of the score, slays me. Must learn on piano!
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And I'm totally with you on the lullaby too! I wonder if it's on the soundtrack (Mercedes' version)?
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But I loved it; the Doctor was one of my favourite characters: you know he knows they're all beaten and this is going to end badly but he still does what he can, and then that last line to the Captain about obedience, which the Captain just can never understand.
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YES! I agree - I'm not a fan of scorched earth films so I am SO glad that there were a few rays of light by the end.
It was a great movie, in my opinion - that it had such understated yet marvelous characters like Doctor Ferreira, and also, I remember when Mercedes said she was a coward for cooking and cleaning for such a monster and the doctor soothed her by reminding her that they all do whatever they can do. Guuh. Normal, everday people who never imagined they would have to contend with such horrors - the way that a person can rise above such darkness and be something better, purer, even if it is only in small ways, small rebellions...these are the things that tell us the quality of humanity.
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