facebook
post: on the fatuous irrelevance of ‘finding yourself’.
Saw 'chinese puzzle' at angelika
yesterday at 5:30 pm. because the dance party/parade across the street from me
in tompkins square was so effing LOUD I decided I had to escape for a few
hours. Plus I'd seen the ny times review of it which made it seem like a sweet thing about Europeans in NYC,
and how could I not want to see that. But escaping to Angelika plunged me again
into this odd relation I have with movies, or maybe with shared reality culture
of pretty much any kind. Maybe it's my upcoming cataract op & the fact, in
fact, that I was able (being over 62) to pay 11 bucks, not 14, at Angelika for
a ticket, but I'm sort of entranced/bemused by -- & more than a little
curious about -- my increasing sense that movies aren't being made for me. That
is, even smart sensitive funny/real dimensional foreign flicks like this one
which I suppose I've always counted on categorically to be 'interesting,' now
seem to me to reveal their game plans right off as -- well, about the strained
exertions of 20-somethings/30-somethings/40-somethings trying to find
themselves. I don't claim to have 'found' myself - merely to have bumbled into
the deep understanding that the very search, or anyway framing it as a search
to "find yourself", seems fatuously irrelevant to actual life.
"I don't know who I am!" is supposed to be the great existential
anguished cry. But to me, forgive me, it now seems like the silliest five words
a human being can say to her/himself. It's so myopically self-involved that it
stops you from seeing anything. My 'self' is the least interesting part of my
experience of living. It would be as if a violin couldn't stop wondering why
(or if!) it was a violin. The purpose of the thing is to PLAY. Not worry about
some abstract idea of its identity. "Finding oneself" does, however -
mixed with sex (thank heavens for that anyway) - seem to be the animating
impulse of very nearly every movie & novel & other art aimed at the
world. I dunno, honeys. I think you just sort of drop all that crap after a while,
don't you? It's like staring at a door knob. Grab the thing & open the
door!
"Chinese Puzzle" was interesting, though, in its french take on nyc, which kept it largely in chinatown. I thought that was pretty funny. And the main male character is frenchishly hot. But otherwise, oh dear.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/18/movies/cedric-klapisch-returns-to-4-characters-in-chinese-puzzle.html?ref=arts
"Chinese Puzzle" was interesting, though, in its french take on nyc, which kept it largely in chinatown. I thought that was pretty funny. And the main male character is frenchishly hot. But otherwise, oh dear.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/18/movies/cedric-klapisch-returns-to-4-characters-in-chinese-puzzle.html?ref=arts
No comments:
Post a Comment