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Kestrell ([personal profile] kestrell) wrote2012-02-26 08:32 am
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Article on the relationship between magic and movies

Hugo and the magic of film trickery
J Hoberman
guardian.co.uk
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/feb/24/hugo-martin-scorsese-oscars-georges-melies

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With Georges Méliès as its subject, Martin Scorsese's Hugo – up for 11 Oscars – is a film that gives meaning to the cliché 'the magic of the movies'

Should you stay up for the Oscars, here's a surefire way to be hammered by the end: pour yourself a drink each time you hear the word "magic", and you'll be watching the winner's tearful acceptance speech in an alcoholic haze.
Is there a phrase more hackneyed than "the magic of the movies"? From the moment of their invention at the end of the 19th century, motion pictures have been perceived as simultaneously hyper natural and supernatural.
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jesse_the_k: text: Be kinder than need be: everyone is fighting some kind of battle (LUCY old and no longer)

[personal profile] jesse_the_k 2012-02-26 09:57 pm (UTC)(link)
So, what's your favorite storytelling medium? Human voice, computer voice, interpretive dance, music, movies, theater, tapestry?
capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)

[personal profile] capri0mni 2012-02-27 03:00 am (UTC)(link)
I read The Invention of Hugo Cabret (which is the origin of the movie), and it was so perfect I have no desire to see the film version -- especially since the film version is in color and 3-D, and the story is about early black and white film-making-- and the illustrations match that.*

That said, I do believe storytelling (movies and otherwise) is magic -- in a very literal sense. They "Make with Belief," which has always been the sorcerer's art: pulling the unreal out of the ether and making it real.

*it was the first middle-grade chapter book to ever win a Caldecott Medal for illustration...