• TraschcanOfIdeology [they/them, comrade/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    24 days ago

    I think what's really interesting visually about the film is that the urban environment looks extremely population dense, kind of grimy, and lived-in, but it's not played for dystopia points or to show things are bad. It doesn't have that fascist aesthetics of "the future is clean and perfect and streamlined" or "NY in the 70s but with computers" that a lot of sci-fi falls into, it's somewhere in between. The apartments are shitty shoeboxes, the airport seems to be full of garbage, and there's crime, but it's not shown to be horrible.

    Bruce Willis' character gets food from the flying Asian noodle vendor and it's just treated as something people do, eating out of your window because there seems to be nothing at ground level.

    Idk what my point is, I just think it's a different kind of futuristic film that doesn't follow contemporary visual shorthand that showed the future as either 100% clean cut and beautiful or what westerners thought Kowloon walled city was: a lawless hell hole of urban density.

    • REgon [they/them]
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      24 days ago

      Yeah that's the big thing I love about the movie actually. Like it's just sci-fi but neither dystopian or utopian, just people living in a way. It's really cool