Oh it matters that Rose is trapped in the Fog World. This isn't the type of story where she rescues the child from the cult and goes back to her life as it was. (Note how the creators knew of and rejected that ending from the video game). This their take on the "deal with the devil" story. It's not that a Jabez Stone is a bad person, it was that he had a tragic flaw that the devil exploited and overwhelmed him. The Dark Part of Alessa does the same thing to Rose, engineering the entire scheme with Sharon so Rose was terrified into joining her side for revenge. But there were consequences.Yuki wrote: It doesn't matter, though, if she's in or out of the Fog World. That's not the question. It is not a punishment: Rose is safe. The movie isn't passing any moral judgement on Rose, because Alessa has decided she wants to stay with Rose; it's not saying "Rose is bad because she sided with Alessa and thus she's trapped in the fog world," it's saying "Alessa loves Rose because Mother is God in the eyes of a child, and thus she's causing them to remain in the fog world."
MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
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Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Last edited by tbonesays on 02 Mar 2013, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
but that's not even damnation by the most vaguest definition. Damnation by even the losest terms of maledictation require a punishment element or atleast some sort of doom. Rose doesn't have any of that. From the perspective of Alessa, it's paradise, and she has the ability to make it paradise for Rose too. You're effectively saying the Lotus Eaters are damned. This isn't even logically coherent; you're just trying to force your prefered interpretation into a film that doesn't support it.Oh it matters that Rose is trapped in the Fog World. This isn't the type of story where she rescues the child from the cult and goes back to her life as it was. (Note how the knew of and rejected that ending from the video game). This their take on the "deal with the devil" story. It's not that a Jabez Stone is a bad person, it was that he had a tragic flaw that the devil exploited and overwhelmed him. The Dark Part of Alessa does the same thing to Rose, engineering the entire scheme with Sharon so Rose was terrified into joining her side for revenge. But there were consequences.
Also, don't imply that Rose's love for her daughter is a fatal flaw, that's disgusting.
[quote="BlackFire2"]I thought he meant the special powers of her vagina.[/quote]
Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Personal opinions are always welcome. Rose's tragic flaw is a love of Sharon in excess, because it drives her to do insane things like barrel through a chain link fence into a poisonous environmental disaster zone. It's good that you are aghast at the notion that love of a child can be a tragic flaw. That's the point, the flaw always looks good on the surface. And while you are watching the movie, you don't really notice it because Rose is always portrayed in a noble light. But it's there, the film is part of the genre.AuraTwilight wrote:but that's not even damnation by the most vaguest definition. Damnation by even the losest terms of maledictation require a punishment element or atleast some sort of doom. Rose doesn't have any of that. From the perspective of Alessa, it's paradise, and she has the ability to make it paradise for Rose too. You're effectively saying the Lotus Eaters are damned. This isn't even logically coherent; you're just trying to force your prefered interpretation into a film that doesn't support it.Oh it matters that Rose is trapped in the Fog World. This isn't the type of story where she rescues the child from the cult and goes back to her life as it was. (Note how the knew of and rejected that ending from the video game). This their take on the "deal with the devil" story. It's not that a Jabez Stone is a bad person, it was that he had a tragic flaw that the devil exploited and overwhelmed him. The Dark Part of Alessa does the same thing to Rose, engineering the entire scheme with Sharon so Rose was terrified into joining her side for revenge. But there were consequences.
Also, don't imply that Rose's love for her daughter is a fatal flaw, that's disgusting.
Not sure what you meant by the analogy to the ancient drug addicts. I suppose in general there was a cause that lead to an effect; of being stuck in one place.
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Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
By your own description, then, the flaw isn't loving Sharon in excess, it's not thinking through her actions and being entirely reckless. That's entirely and completely different. The flaw is one thing, her motivation is another. The motivation feeds her flaw but the motivation feeds everything she does, and not everything she does ties into her character flaw.Rose's tragic flaw is a love of Sharon in excess, because it drives her to do insane things like barrel through a chain link fence into a poisonous environmental disaster zone. It's good that you are aghast at the notion that love of a child can be a tragic flaw. That's the point, the flaw always looks good on the surface. And while you are watching the movie, you don't really notice it because Rose is always portrayed in a noble light. But it's there, the film is part of the genre.
You're not even arguing rationally, here.
The Lotus Eaters deny reality to be happy. Alessa denies reality to be happy. That's the analogy.Not sure what you meant by the analogy to the ancient drug addicts. I suppose in general there was a cause that lead to an effect; of being stuck in one place.
[quote="BlackFire2"]I thought he meant the special powers of her vagina.[/quote]
Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
I don't see the difference between motivation and flaw. Rose's excessive love makes it her only good. She is blind to any good besides Sharon. Rose even rationlizes it for us when she says "I thought it would help her." Rose spells it out that she loves her daughter so much that she'll do anything and damn the consequences.AuraTwilight wrote:By your own description, then, the flaw isn't loving Sharon in excess, it's not thinking through her actions and being entirely reckless. That's entirely and completely different. The flaw is one thing, her motivation is another. The motivation feeds her flaw but the motivation feeds everything she does, and not everything she does ties into her character flaw.Rose's tragic flaw is a love of Sharon in excess, because it drives her to do insane things like barrel through a chain link fence into a poisonous environmental disaster zone. It's good that you are aghast at the notion that love of a child can be a tragic flaw. That's the point, the flaw always looks good on the surface. And while you are watching the movie, you don't really notice it because Rose is always portrayed in a noble light. But it's there, the film is part of the genre.
You're not even arguing rationally, here.
Not sure what you meant by the analogy to the ancient drug addicts. I suppose in general there was a cause that lead to an effect; of being stuck in one place.
I didn't see anything in the Odyssey that suggested the Lotus Eaters were denying reality. They just preferred life on their island to the rest of reality.The Lotus Eaters deny reality to be happy. Alessa denies reality to be happy. That's the analogy.
Last edited by tbonesays on 03 Mar 2013, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
And given that she never does anything EVIL as a result of it, I'm not seeing it as a flaw; a character's motive, in pure Shakespearean terms, is not the flaw so much as what they do to achieve that goal. In that sense, her flaw would be more aptly described with how she never really changes her mind once she's set on a path.I don't see the difference between motivation and flaw. Rose's excessive love makes it her only good. She is blind to any good besides Sharon. Rose even rationlizes it for us when she says "I thought it would help her." Rose spells it out that she loves her daughter so much that she'll do anything and damn the consequences.
The metaphor of the Lotus Eaters is abandoning your entire life to pursue an illusory happiness, which is why they were basically getting coked up on the lotus flowers. It was essentially the same as hooking yourself up to a virtual reality machine or choosing to be on Ecstasy all the time.I didn't see anything in the Odyssey that suggested the Lotus Eaters were denying reality. They just preferred life on their island to the rest of reality.
[quote="BlackFire2"]I thought he meant the special powers of her vagina.[/quote]
Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Well the tragic hero usually does not do things that are overtly evil. The ancient lit is pretty amoral in portraying how the tragic flaw, of say Oedipus, leads him to do misguided things. AD heroes (Macbeth) tend more to be ovewhelmed by the weakness of the flaw and do something terrible.AuraTwilight wrote: And given that she never does anything EVIL as a result of it, I'm not seeing it as a flaw; a character's motive, in pure Shakespearean terms, is not the flaw so much as what they do to achieve that goal. In that sense, her flaw would be more aptly described with how she never really changes her mind once she's set on a path.
You say that Rose's flaw is being stubborn instead of excessive love for Sharon? I would want to see Rose being stubborn in places not directly connected to Sharon. Rose is noticeably stubborn twice, on the phone with Chris and when fleeing the traffic stop. After those early moments, we don't see it for the rest of the movie. I'd agree that she is stubborn person but that's
after she's made the decisions, decisions motivated by desire to help Sharon.
Then that does sound kind of a damnation.The metaphor of the Lotus Eaters is abandoning your entire life to pursue an illusory happiness, which is why they were basically getting coked up on the lotus flowers. It was essentially the same as hooking yourself up to a virtual reality machine or choosing to be on Ecstasy all the time.
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Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Unfortunately that's impossible, considering that she isn't motivated by anything else. But she is stubborn throughout the movie in the sense that she refuses to consider she's on the wrong path. She trusts every source of information until they betray her, she never considers that she's doing the wrong thing for Sharon or herself, and she's careless as hell.You say that Rose's flaw is being stubborn instead of excessive love for Sharon? I would want to see Rose being stubborn in places not directly connected to Sharon. Rose is noticeably stubborn twice, on the phone with Chris and when fleeing the traffic stop. After those early moments, we don't see it for the rest of the movie. I'd agree that she is stubborn person but that's
after she's made the decisions, decisions motivated by desire to help Sharon.
Her flaw is a lack of critical thinking, really.
Damnation definitively involves suffering.Then that does sound kind of a damnation.
[quote="BlackFire2"]I thought he meant the special powers of her vagina.[/quote]
Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Who is imposing his viewpoint on the film?AuraTwilight wrote:Unfortunately that's impossible, considering that she isn't motivated by anything else. But she is stubborn throughout the movie in the sense that she refuses to consider she's on the wrong path. She trusts every source of information until they betray her, she never considers that she's doing the wrong thing for Sharon or herself, and she's careless as hell.You say that Rose's flaw is being stubborn instead of excessive love for Sharon? I would want to see Rose being stubborn in places not directly connected to Sharon. Rose is noticeably stubborn twice, on the phone with Chris and when fleeing the traffic stop. After those early moments, we don't see it for the rest of the movie. I'd agree that she is stubborn person but that's
after she's made the decisions, decisions motivated by desire to help Sharon.
Her flaw is a lack of critical thinking, really.
There's an old Zone episode (quite SH2 like) where Gladys Cooper plays a stubborn woman. Although it's only 30 minutes long, they go out of their way to show her being stubborn in much of the dialogue with side characters. I didn't see anything noticeable in how Rose treats Cybil, Dahlia, and Anna. Rose is more or less aloof unless they demand her attention.
Limbo! The virtuous pagans in Dante's Inferno are in limbo where they neither suffer nor celebrate. It's implied they just sit around all day. Silent Hill, as most art, draws from Infernal imagery, and the Fog World is basically a version of Limbo. Maybe you could argue Limbo was a version of Lotus Island.
Damnation definitively involves suffering.
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Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Not the guy who's paraphrasing DVD features. ^_^Who is imposing his viewpoint on the film?
Limbo isn't damnation, though, considering the virtuous pagans will eventually be given an 'out' in the Times of Tribulations.Limbo! The virtuous pagans in Dante's Inferno are in limbo where they neither suffer nor celebrate. It's implied they just sit around all day. Silent Hill, as most art, draws from Infernal imagery, and the Fog World is basically a version of Limbo. Maybe you could argue Limbo was a version of Lotus Island.
[quote="BlackFire2"]I thought he meant the special powers of her vagina.[/quote]
Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Not in Dante's Inferno.AuraTwilight wrote:Not the guy who's paraphrasing DVD features. ^_^Who is imposing his viewpoint on the film?
Limbo isn't damnation, though, considering the virtuous pagans will eventually be given an 'out' in the Times of Tribulations.Limbo! The virtuous pagans in Dante's Inferno are in limbo where they neither suffer nor celebrate. It's implied they just sit around all day. Silent Hill, as most art, draws from Infernal imagery, and the Fog World is basically a version of Limbo. Maybe you could argue Limbo was a version of Lotus Island.
Rose's only escape from Limbo may be the time of serialization.
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Er, not the Inferno specifically, but in other parts of the Divine Comedy. Ever get to the Empyrean?Not in Dante's Inferno.
In any case, Rose's case isn't similar to Limbo anyway. You're grasping at straws.
[quote="BlackFire2"]I thought he meant the special powers of her vagina.[/quote]
Re: MOVIE ENDING THEORIES!
Fine, which part of the sequels to the Inferno indicates an escape from Limbo? And I said Rose's best chance to escape her imprisonment in Fog Limbo is a sequel that needs her out. That's exactly how Heather Mason escapes in Revelation, there was suddenly a magic seal that puts people where they need to be.AuraTwilight wrote:Er, not the Inferno specifically, but in other parts of the Divine Comedy. Ever get to the Empyrean?Not in Dante's Inferno.
In any case, Rose's case isn't similar to Limbo anyway. You're grasping at straws.