Waking Life
Posted: Fri Aug 17, 2007 4:59 pm
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0243017/
Waking Life is the story of a young man unable to wake from a dream, and is confronted by people living within the dream. They discuss with him the meaning of life, alienation, the concept of dreams versus reality, time as an illusion, and many more very in-depth conversations that really make you think about where your own life is taking you.
This has to be the most profound movie I have ever seen. I'm not suprised I never saw it or heard of it. When it was released in 2001, I was not at a level of intelligence that would allow me to be drawn in towards movies of this calibur. The ideas put forth by this film make you think twice about existance. Rather, not questioning religous belief, but drawing alternate conclusions from the same sources of information. Lately I've been in a mode of self preservation, feeling the need to protect what I beleive in. After watching this, I realize, that I don't need to protect my faith or the faith of others. It is a state of mind we all decide on for ourselves. The influence of others has little or no effect on what out faith in life tells us unless those moments or people are truely profound, impacting the time and place that the idea is seeded so immensely, that we then decide for ourselves what the world around us truely represents... perhaps altering faith, but not eliminating it.
This is a movie that brings forth even more controvercial ideas than this. It says that you can feel free to question life, decide whether you are awake or dreaming, dead or alive, time as a concept rather than a tangible straight line, and yet keep walking forward in the life as we know it.
This is a movie for thinkers. It isn't an action film, and has a plot that is extremely difficult to follow. It is a series of moments that are intended to make you really think hard about what the characters are saying. Almost like listening to stoners ramble random epimphony, but instead makes perfect sense to an open mind. The entire movie is animated in a cel-shaded rotoscope style, most likely copied directly from actual live action sequences. It is similar to that seen in A Scanner Darkly. Absolutely spectacular work.
It made me rethink the way life is lived and observed. It may do something different for everyone. It is extremely rare that a movie lets you draw your own conclusions.
Waking Life is the story of a young man unable to wake from a dream, and is confronted by people living within the dream. They discuss with him the meaning of life, alienation, the concept of dreams versus reality, time as an illusion, and many more very in-depth conversations that really make you think about where your own life is taking you.
This has to be the most profound movie I have ever seen. I'm not suprised I never saw it or heard of it. When it was released in 2001, I was not at a level of intelligence that would allow me to be drawn in towards movies of this calibur. The ideas put forth by this film make you think twice about existance. Rather, not questioning religous belief, but drawing alternate conclusions from the same sources of information. Lately I've been in a mode of self preservation, feeling the need to protect what I beleive in. After watching this, I realize, that I don't need to protect my faith or the faith of others. It is a state of mind we all decide on for ourselves. The influence of others has little or no effect on what out faith in life tells us unless those moments or people are truely profound, impacting the time and place that the idea is seeded so immensely, that we then decide for ourselves what the world around us truely represents... perhaps altering faith, but not eliminating it.
This is a movie that brings forth even more controvercial ideas than this. It says that you can feel free to question life, decide whether you are awake or dreaming, dead or alive, time as a concept rather than a tangible straight line, and yet keep walking forward in the life as we know it.
This is a movie for thinkers. It isn't an action film, and has a plot that is extremely difficult to follow. It is a series of moments that are intended to make you really think hard about what the characters are saying. Almost like listening to stoners ramble random epimphony, but instead makes perfect sense to an open mind. The entire movie is animated in a cel-shaded rotoscope style, most likely copied directly from actual live action sequences. It is similar to that seen in A Scanner Darkly. Absolutely spectacular work.
It made me rethink the way life is lived and observed. It may do something different for everyone. It is extremely rare that a movie lets you draw your own conclusions.