Posts Tagged Movies

Media Monday- Burtynsky’s Manufactured Landscapes

Movie ReviewsI recently picked up Manufactured Landscapes from our public library.  I really didn’t know what to expect.  The film looked like an artsy and interesting documentary.  So I grabbed it.   I was pleasantly surprised with what it turned out to be.

From the back of the DVD:

The film follows Internationally acclaimed photographer Edward Burtynsky whose large-scale photographs of manufactured landscapes quarries, recycling yards, factories, mines and dams create stunningly beautiful art from civilization s materials and debris. The film follows him through China, as he shoots the evidence and effects of that country s massive industrial revolution. Burtynsky s photographs allow us to meditate on our impact on the planet and witness both the epicenters of industrial endeavor and the dumping grounds of its waste.

If you know me at all, you’ll probably think it is strange that I found an essentially enviromental or activist film so compelling. Here’s the thing.  Labeling this film in this way would limit the scope of its impact.  This is a movie about humanity.  Does it have environmental or global implications?…Yes, of course.  But this film openned my eyes to a reality that is unseen by most of us.

Manufactured Landscapes DVDThe opening of the movie is a slow moving camera shot through a manufacturing facility.  The building seems so endless that it feels a little uncomfortable.  What was so striking to me while watching was how quiet the factory was.  There were the sounds of machinery and an occasional supervisor…but there was no blaring oldies station, no ruckus of factory workers…it was thousands of people quietly doing their work.  Throughout the film you get to see more clips of what some of these workers were doing on this assembly line. Again these are uncomfortably quiet as you see the mundane nature of their tasks.

The film goes on the explore many aspects of the industrial revolution that is in full force in China.  The scenes are breathtaking.  The scenes are disturbing.  Some of the most poignant are the shots of whole cities being torn down brick by brick by their own inhabitants in order to make way for a dam and reservoir that will engulf the region in water.  The dam (Three Gorges Dam) is the largest civil engineering project in the world.  All of the destruction and relocation of millions is to serve the advancement of the society and its need for electric power.

In short, what you will see in this film makes you think.

What is the impact that sin is having on the world?  Where can we see society at odds with its creator?  Watching the scenes and hearing some of the stories in Manufactured Landscapes reveals that what is subtle in our western culture (the need to dominate and advance) is not so subtle when it drives the Billions of people and their government in China.  What we see exposed, exposes us.  This should challenge us to live in reality…not simply to let the clouds around us become reality.

We could easily view this film and respond with a distant, “Wow…That’s really bad.”  This was my initial response.  Since viewing the film, I have been wrestling with what my response moving forward should be.  What impact will this new information, this new perspective, have on life as we know it?

Any suggestions?

I would recommend finding this at your local library and viewing it as a family.  It could be a great springboard into some challenging and important discussions.

Here is a trailer that I found on YouTube:

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Disney’s Enchanted…Magic and Mayhem


Enchanted
Review by Natalie Steiner

with Mark Moulton 

Disney’s Enchanted is a movie about Giselle, a princess wannabe from a fairy tale land. When a wicked witch pushes her into a well, Giselle suddenly finds herself instead in present-day New York city.

Following a hilarious scene, Robert Philip and his daughter Morgan discover this lost princess, realize she is out of place (to say the least) and invite her to stay with them at their apartment.  Things get complicated as Morgan begins to care more for Giselle and divorcee Robert is trying to help her (in the midst of being distracted by her) to get back to her magical land where she won’t be so out of place (Spontaneously breaking into song during normal conversations is out of the ordinary…even in New York.  This is hilarious).  Meanwhile, Giselle simply believes that a hero will soon arrive to rescue her.

That hero comes in the form of Prince Edward who jumps into the well to find Giselle, return to the fairy tale land, and get married.  But close behind Edward comes the wicked witch who has plans of her own…involving an apple…a deep sleep…well, you get the idea.

The movie continue to strew along its path elements from the plotlines of several older Disney fairy tale classics.  It is like a trail of bread crumbs that let us retrace familiar steps through the magical world where anything can happen.

This cute, light-hearted film readily tickles the funny bone as the “flat” realities of fairy tales rub up against the more ragged, unpredictable edges of 3-D existence.  As a family movie, this will please children, teenagers and adults- and not just females!  Unfortunately, in seeking older viewership, the movie has a mix of innuendo and coarse humor…thus the movie has a PG rating.  In addition, some scenes could frighten the very young.

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What Can We Watch Tonight?

What Can We Watch TonightBook Review by Mark Moulton

Recommended

Movies, TV, video games, music, and other media claim our children’s attention about 3 1/2 times the hours that they spend in classes.  Yet sadly, patterns of media use in the households of believers differ little on the average from those in a typical American home.  Such statistics motivate Dr. Ted Baehr in the introductory chapters of What Can We Watch Tonight? to probe into just how our families and their members might better honor Christ in their use of the visual media.

Believing that “whoever controls the media, controls the culture,” Dr. Baehr’s concerns extend beyond simply providing Christian reviews of popular movies (in this case, movies of note from the nineties).  The reviews provided represent only one of several prongs in the strategy of his Good News Communications/Christian Film and Television Commission.  The organization aims both to promote better Christian viewing practices and to encourage those managing the public media to clean up its moral appeal and produce comparatively more Christian-friendly offerings.  

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The Water Horse-Spencer and Mark Review

    Combine local monster myths with an oversized egg hatching off a “loch” in Scotland and you are set up for terror. But if, as in “Water Horse”, the monster turns out to be quite loveable and innocent – just terribly misunderstood – well, maybe that is different.
   In the movie a variety of individuals react to the strange recent goings-on in and around the loch.  Young Angus MacMarrow tries to keep the fast-growing beast a secret so nervous townspeople won’t try to get rid of or capture it.
   Pace and predictability are weaker points in a rather upbeat, satisfying tale. The action of the computer-assisted monster convinced us, and so some of the peril might be too much for those under, say, nine years old. Mouthy kissing at one point and occasional minor swearing further explain the PG rating. Holds up fine when you compare it to other child-protects-animal-from-the-mindless-community movies (e.g. Free Willy, etc.) and very well to the children’s versions of the preserve-the-dinosaur motif.

Spencer and Mark (Spencer Moulton and his dad, Mark Moulton) stamp it worthy of

2 1/2 out of 4 stars…being as we are, overly picky!


Suggested things to discuss right after watching:

   Why did certain people want to get rid of the waterhorse; and what did they think was true about the water horse that really was not? [In each instance, what is a different way things might have happened so that the people involved would have recognized they were overreacting?]  Have you yourself ever judged a person or a situation more harshly than the facts ended up supporting? (And, did anyone get offended? And, can you think of what you might have done to be more reasonable about it?)

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