How do you like your vengence?
Mar. 2nd, 2004 06:23 pmWe have finally seen “Kill Bill”, and I love it dearly.
I don’t particularly like Tarantino, but he is a brilliant storyteller. The way everything in this movie cams together just right – picture, music, story, editing, actors, choreography – every single piece. The way they add to each other – meaning, colour, poignancy, gore. Even that ridiculous, over-the-top bloodiness, even some random details, even the cartoon in the middle…
Did I mention how much I enjoyed it?
And then I realized that vengeance is one of my bullet-proof kinks in fiction. Vengeance often makes for an interesting plot, but when it is not just the plot, but the workings of mind of the avenger, but when we have not just cool vengeance, but also its consequences, it gets me. I don’t like “Count Monte-Cristo” – classical vengeance story, though, I am not sure why – I tried to read it long ago, stopped, and never came back. I am thinking about reading “The Oresteia” – speaking of classics. I was kind of scared of reading Ancient Greek literature, so I had some bits and pieces, but recently I am in Greek mood, so probably I’ll give it a try.
Another movie I remembered while thinking about “Kill Bill” – “The Bride wore black” with Jeanne Moreau.
I don’t particularly like Tarantino, but he is a brilliant storyteller. The way everything in this movie cams together just right – picture, music, story, editing, actors, choreography – every single piece. The way they add to each other – meaning, colour, poignancy, gore. Even that ridiculous, over-the-top bloodiness, even some random details, even the cartoon in the middle…
Did I mention how much I enjoyed it?
And then I realized that vengeance is one of my bullet-proof kinks in fiction. Vengeance often makes for an interesting plot, but when it is not just the plot, but the workings of mind of the avenger, but when we have not just cool vengeance, but also its consequences, it gets me. I don’t like “Count Monte-Cristo” – classical vengeance story, though, I am not sure why – I tried to read it long ago, stopped, and never came back. I am thinking about reading “The Oresteia” – speaking of classics. I was kind of scared of reading Ancient Greek literature, so I had some bits and pieces, but recently I am in Greek mood, so probably I’ll give it a try.
Another movie I remembered while thinking about “Kill Bill” – “The Bride wore black” with Jeanne Moreau.
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Date: 2004-03-02 06:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-03-02 06:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-03-02 07:08 pm (UTC)I had some thoughts about Kill Bill when I saw it a couple of months ago.
http://www.livejournal.com/users/jonesiexxx/41652.html#cutid1
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Date: 2004-03-03 05:54 pm (UTC)Now, to take the story itself – it made me think and let me enjoy the picture. To see how vengeance gets its way, how it changes all sides of it (exacting and receiving), how it goes the full circle. Often revenge is a gut reaction, no matter how nice and civilized we are, no matter what our morality tells us: when we (or someone we care about) are hurt, we want to hurt back. But vengeance is never an end in itself. So, the revenge story allows us to question a lot of things – in characters, in ourselves, plus it gives a fascinating action. Going back to Kill Bill – I root for the Bride, but she cannot win, possibly nobody can win in this story, and I have a bad feeling that the girl in the beginning was actually her daughter.
I read Hamlet, but interestingly, it never comes to my mind when I am thinking about the “revenge” plot. May be, because it begins as a revenge story and then turns into something else. We’ll see what “Kill Bill” can turn into. And I will look into Jacobeans too, thanks for the advice.