Posts: 2,678
Threads: 178
Joined: Apr 2008
Reputation:
3
RE: Tropey Politics
02-21-2020, 09:21 PM
Well, it's a foreign movie about the evils of capitalism, with subtitles. Three things that scare and confuse him.
Posts: 2,216
Threads: 134
Joined: Jun 2005
Reputation:
2
RE: Tropey Politics
02-21-2020, 09:58 PM
(02-21-2020, 09:21 PM)Matrix Dragon Wrote: Well, it's a foreign movie about the evils of capitalism, with subtitles. Three things that scare and confuse him.
Someone must've
explained to him what it's about, 'cause he couldn't read the subtitles.
-----
"The Lady of the Lake, her arm clad in the purest shimmering samite, held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying by divine providence that this was some killer weed."
Posts: 3,738
Threads: 96
Joined: May 2012
Reputation:
9
RE: Tropey Politics
02-22-2020, 12:53 AM
"Kitto daijoubu da yo." - Sakura Kinomoto
Posts: 3,738
Threads: 96
Joined: May 2012
Reputation:
9
RE: Tropey Politics
02-23-2020, 06:24 AM
Errol Morris Wrote:So he’s talking about Citizen Kane, and it’s kind of amazing. I’m not even sure I know what to make of it, and I have to be perfectly honest that my feelings about Donald Trump are clouded by what you might call his current role as president of the United States. So he starts to tell me about Charles Foster Kane, who he identifies with. And what was Charles Foster Kane’s real problem? Was his problem that he was a megalomaniac? Not so much. Was his problem that he treated people around him miserably? Nah! What was his problem? According to Donald Trump, his problem was the woman he married. So at the very end of this clip, I asked Donald Trump, “Would you have any advice for Charles Foster Kane?” And he says, “Yeah! Get yourself a different woman.”
Errol Morris on Donald Trump’s Takeaway From ‘Citizen Kane’
Incidentally this interview was done for the 2002 Oscars. It's one of Trump's favorite movies.
I've been doing a lot of thinking of what it must be like to be Trump and watch movies. He can't really feel love or empathy, so most of writers are trying to do can't really work at all. So when he says he likes
Sunset Boulevard -- and this is one of the few things I agree with him about -- is it because he's thinking the whole time, "Yeah, broads get so crazy when they're old and useless," or something? Trying to imagine what it's like to think about reality from the perspective of someone who is missing cognitive development milestones is actually a rather interesting exercise for characterization.
"Kitto daijoubu da yo." - Sakura Kinomoto