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Topic Review (Newest First)
Oct 8th, 2008 02:24 PM
Seven Force wish he was stillborn
Oct 6th, 2008 10:42 AM
Sacks I think Baby's Day Out came out before GW was born.
Oct 4th, 2008 02:44 PM
Zbu Manowar
Quote:
Originally Posted by WhiteRat View Post
No, it's the one where the Baby's endless thirst for human blood takes it on a rampage through a hospice center.
It's Alive 4: Baby's Way OUT.

(or Dr. Giggles 2)
Oct 1st, 2008 02:07 AM
WhiteRat Check the chat thread, dubya.
Sep 30th, 2008 06:17 PM
executioneer whiterat what is the status of fatcat we are all dying to know
Sep 30th, 2008 10:18 AM
WhiteRat No, it's the one where the Baby's endless thirst for human blood takes it on a rampage through a hospice center.
Sep 30th, 2008 09:17 AM
Neen Is that the one where the baby was crawling on girders of a construction site?
Sep 30th, 2008 02:16 AM
WhiteRat
Sep 29th, 2008 08:46 PM
pac-man Baby's Day Out would've been great if it had been done 70 years ago and featured The Three Stooges.
Sep 29th, 2008 08:42 PM
Nick Relax, don't do it.
Sep 28th, 2008 01:36 PM
Guitar Woman
Quote:
Originally Posted by WhiteRat View Post
GW, how can anyone take your movie opinions seriously when you once started a thread about the "great cinematography" of Baby's Day Out?
I just noticed this post

Are you thinking of some other internet transvestite? You must be, because I'd probably try my absolute hardest to avoid watching a movie called "Baby's Day Out."
Sep 27th, 2008 02:37 PM
Kitsa You'd totally be able to get a paper out of that, and you'd totally get a professor to gobble it up and want more.

That being said, some time ago a desi I knew provided a line-by-line analysis of the song Brimful of Asha. "This could mean this. Or this could mean this."

Someone interrupted, "Or maybe it's just a fucking song. Jesus Christ."
Sep 27th, 2008 10:11 AM
Zbu Manowar
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wild Wallace View Post
So, Zbu, do you have any analysis on Planes, Trains, and Automobiles or Uncle Buck you would be willing to post a thesis on?
Depends if I can get myself some Everclear again. Man, never watch '80s films when drunk as hell.
Aug 25th, 2008 06:10 AM
Rez hahahahahahah

people tend to write this stuff if they think its implications insidiously implant themselves in the minds of 'impressionable youtes.'
this is akin to writing about the dangerous levels of cultural insanity that the popularity of chimpanzees in 80s movies implied.
bueller was just goofy crap for goofy kids jeez.
Aug 23rd, 2008 06:47 PM
Wild Wallace So, Zbu, do you have any analysis on Planes, Trains, and Automobiles or Uncle Buck you would be willing to post a thesis on?
Aug 22nd, 2008 12:12 AM
WhiteRat GW, how can anyone take your movie opinions seriously when you once started a thread about the "great cinematography" of Baby's Day Out?
Aug 21st, 2008 10:29 PM
Guitar Woman ferris buellers day off is a really funny movie
Aug 21st, 2008 08:54 PM
Esuohlim Kevin Smith
Aug 21st, 2008 08:42 PM
pac-man I prefer Kevin Smith and company's take on Mr. Hughes:



"You mean '16 Candles' John Hughes?"

"You know him too? That fucking guy. Made this flick "16 Candles" right? Not bad it's got tits in it, but no bush. Of course Ebert over here don't give a shit about that stuff cause he's all in love with this John Hughes guy and rents every one of his movies. Fucking "Breakfast Club" all these stupid kids actually show up to detention, fucking "Weird Science" where this one chick wants to take off her gear and get down, but aw, no she don't cause it's a PG movie, and then there's "Pretty In Pink" which I can't watch with this tubby muthafucker any more, because everytime we get to the part where the red head hooks up with her dream guy, he starts sobbin' like a little eight-year-old with a skinned knee and shit. And nothing is worse then watching a fat man weep."
Aug 21st, 2008 08:20 PM
Krythor Who says that his intelligence is decided based on his ability to subvert the routine of every day life? You said yourself that he continues to show close ties to the school even on his day off. Maybe he's intelligent because he does go to school most of the time? The message of the movie is more light hearted than "down with the system." In fact I'd say it's the opposite of that, and a message that this thread should probably take on board: relax. I don't think it's unintentional either; the idea of it being anti-establishment has never occurred to me.
Aug 21st, 2008 02:58 PM
Dimnos I think your looking to deep into this. Its just a comedy man. A comedy from the 80s even.
Aug 20th, 2008 02:28 AM
LordSappington You killed my childhood more efficiently than rule 34 ever could.
Aug 20th, 2008 01:51 AM
executioneer PHILOSOPHY FORUM

j/k
Aug 20th, 2008 01:39 AM
Zbu Manowar
Every character in a John Hughes movie is fucked in the head.

I just got done with watching Ferris Bueller and Breakfast Club on cable and with fresh eyes of a man well beyond high school, I just had to ask this question: what exactly makes Ferris Bueller so fucking smart in the movie?

Hughes showcases him as the Bugs Bunny to the world's Elmer Fudd, but there's nothing really to Ferris. Hughes takes great strides to showcase him as this free spirit/source of playful anarchy that sees through the world's bullshit and tells us to enjoy life. Yet, he doesn't really seem to even be adult enough to justify his pathetic and vague wisdom. "Life moves pretty fast, you have to stop and look around every once and a while" seems to be a half-hearted attempt to justify the conformity that Ferris inherently lacks. While the first part of his motto could be seen as true, the second part is mysterious. If life moves so fast and we must enjoy what we have, then why do we only have to stop and look around once and awhile? Ferris seems to accept that a human has to work for survival, but his methodology about it seems to embrace conforming one's life to work and occasionally breaking free to show one's self. In order to live, states Ferris, one must not be one's self, but mask it until it has to break out. Instead of being a free spirit, one's true self must be occasionally aired out like an old suit before going back into conformity. Hence, being free is a safety valve for the banality of existence. Ferris never addresses this banality, instead showing how one can circumvent it occasionally to reinforce it. He never questions why he must take a day off and go wild but supports it. He is simply not capable of asking why his life is so withdrawn and come to terms of fixing it. He merely skips along, becoming not the opposite to a strict corporate world but a part of it, showcasing how one could stand it but never thinking of why it exists.

In this vein, Ferris becomes the poster boy for conformity. Note his actions throughout the film: when his parents leave and he's free to be himself, he merely hangs around the house for a few hours. After goofing around, he reestablishes ties to the school and takes calls from freshmen and cons Cameron into doing his dirty work. Finally getting his party together, then Ferris goes into Chicago in the '80s and.....has the squarest time ever. Besides leaving a valuable car in a public parking structure to be used and abused, Ferris basically goes on an extended field trip that would bore even Brian from the Breakfast Club. Museums? Very turgid restaurants? A parade? The Sears Tower? Ferris escapes from high school only to regress back to Elementary School. He does nothing really worthwhile or moldbreaking from a pathetic suburban kid. And finally, in the centerpiece of his day off, he hijacks a float and sings two songs that were at least twenty years old. Exactly what the hell is the point in this regression?

Perhaps Ferris is trying to establish the False Past that were prevalent in the Republican-based '80s. The idea that the present is so screwed up because we 'diverted' from a pure past is a silly myth that both excuses the problems of the past with a rose-tinted view while emphasizing the problems of the present via nostalgia. Ferris is a good poster child for this as he merely takes on the corporate world that surrounds the parade (show with many camera shots taken high above the parade) by having several hundred people (and people above in the towers) dance to his songs of years gone by. He doesn't act out in any typical '80s way--his room seems oddly decorated in a lot of English Punk accessories but he never seems to listen to it within the movie. The only '80s music is shown to the audience through the lens of the film, not through the film's narrative in any way. This is telling: the film itself is masking itself as a teenager-knows-all film that Disney puts out even today, but pushes an agenda of falsifying a past in order to create a semblence of false logic that causes any adult in America to justify their hatred of change via Youth and settles into their own turgid ways. Ferris, in this sense, is a bum steer of Republican culture. He does not truly believe in questioning life, but releasing it in random bursts to keep the machine well oiled. The machine's purpose is still left unquestioned, however, but the idea of questioning is relieved by the occasional 'Day Off' burst that Ferris suggests. Behind all of the supposed anarchy that Ferris seems to back, the idea of a 'college-job-marriage' is still pushed as a certainty.

In this way, Ferris isn't a symbol of freedom at all. In many ways, he's like Anthony Burgess's own Clockwork Orange: a wild youth raises hell only to become a respectable and 'normal' member of society no matter what. It seems to be the way of the machine itself.

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