All right. Saw some trailers, and really liked the look of things. Pushes most of my buttons. Scifi? Yup. Cool design and style? Yup. Mystery? Ticked that box.
So the reason why I’m not going to see it is a spoiler, and it’s explained in more detail here:
So yeah. Glad I’m not going to spend money on that bullshit.
The link above has a “click jacking” link on mobile devices, it attempts to force-reroute the viewer to one of those stupid “you win a brand new <fancy electronic toy>, click “OK” to claim your prize” scam sites
I’m curious, are you complaining that the trailer didn’t accurately reflect the movie, or that the movie wasn’t a Harry Potter / Narnia clone? Because (having been familiar with the book loooooooong before the movie) it was the trailer that was crap, deliberately misleading you about the tone of the movie.
Based on this comparison and the rape mention in the review:
But sure, let’s ignore this and rush into a ticking-clock save-the-ship finale so we can have some cool action shots for the trailer while avoiding the rape culture-promoting plot twist that lingers over this film like a child predator at the edge of a playground.
What do the plot details as mentioned in the review have to do with rape? Deception, yes. Rape?
[Not moderating]
Ugh, I just read that review, and anyone who would actually want to see that, I sure as heck wouldn’t want to be in a dark theater with.
Well, people keep playing “Every Breath You Take” at weddings too. And they still think Jack Bauer is the hero of 24. People largely project what they want to see onto entertainment like that.
The idea of a creepy psychological thriller sounds like it has promise, but if the film isn’t going to address one of its underpinnings, that will be extremely disappointing to me.
I haven’t seen anything but the information in the review, but it sounds like there would have been many ways to fix the movie without substantial changes to the script and that’s even more disappointing.
The simplest fix would have been to make both accidents. Assuming that the parts that we’re finding creepy weren’t the writer’s entire point to begin with.
Quote not working, but I didn’t say the plot had anything to do with rape - although if the characters end up sexually involved at any point, arguments could be made for it being rape by deception/coercion.
*Overboard *is a different story. “Yes, you’re really my wife who has amnesia. Now take your clothes off.” Ha ha, yuk yuk.
What I’d love to see is a very serious and probably disturbing look at how badly people deal with long-term isolation. Have him release her from suspended animation after basically going crazy from isolation. Acknowledge just how wrong it is for him to do that, but make us sympathize with him anyway.
(And, just to please the people from the other movie thread tonight: then we can have them break out into a jazzy song and dance number to express their feelings for each other. )
I haven’t seen Overboard, so I can’t speak to its plot, but I was just curious why you specifically compared it to another movie whose plot featured subjective or objective rape and that this seemed to be somewhat echoed by the reviewer who referenced “rape culture” when describing the movie.
At least going by the description of the plot in the review, even calling it rape by deception/coercion doesn’t seem accurate. There doesn’t seem to be any coercion - force or threats to her or anyone in particular by the male character. As to deception, the male character only seems to lie about the cause of the female character waking up, not deceiving her about anything that caused her in and of itself to have sex with him like your description of the plot in Overboard, where a male character lies about his relationship to an amnesiac female character to create false intimacy.
What’s described in that review isn’t rape of any sort, but I don’t think it’s much of a stretch to say that it’s “sort of like rape”, or “characteristic of a rape culture”, or anything like that. What it’s closest to is probably kidnapping, though our current society and laws don’t have anything that’s quite completely congruent.
I was hoping that the female lead turned out to be an android. That the movie, as described, becomes a romance is incomprehensible. This was the hottest unmade script floating around Hollywood?