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nostalgia

  • G

    Is the movie theater experience dead? As someone who grew up going to movies multiple times a week - I'm starting to worry that the end is nigh.  I'm aware many have said movies are dead at different times over the past 30 years - and they've all been wrong... but even though I pay a monthly fee for a movie pass that allows me to see multiple movies a week - I find myself unwilling to leave the house.

    Part of this is the amount of ads before the film - part is the the number of people who think the movie theater is their living room and proceed to talk through the film - part is the amount of people who are on their phones while the film is going... 

    As someone who loves movies, who has made movies and TV all of my adult life - I'm just wondering if the communal experience of sitting together and laughing, crying, screaming and enjoying a great film is something that is quickly becoming a thing of the past.

    I wonder....

    Do you still go to the movies?  Do you enjoy it?  

    If not... 

    Why not?

    Betty Bennett•...
    I'm afraid the theater is on it's way out. It will soon go the way of the drive-in. When I was a child my parents put me in my pajamas in the back of the car and headed to the drive-in every Saturday night....
    theater
    nostalgia
    movie industry
    Comments
    0
  • Julia Krolik•...

    Flow States

    I really love locking in and focusing to hidden jayeem in the background. There is so much nostalgia in there for me ... emotional geography for places I have never visited. I can't remember how I discovered him, but I keep coming back....
    psychology
    music
    nostalgia
    Comments
    1
  • david avatar

    Wabi-sabi applied to the soft-shell membrane of human consciousness. Wabi-sabi is often associated with the Japanese art. In pottery form, it's expression yields Kintsugi, broken pottery re-formed with gold lacquer. 

    But the principle itself celebrates the impermanence, imperfection, and transient yet sacred nature of life. 

    I've read a couple of posts recently here on Uptrusting about holding to the past when letting go may be more appropriate. What if it isn't an either/or proposition? And what if even if it is an either or, does it ever make sense to choose the short-term less painful alternative when you can see that the long-term pain is likely much heavier?

    If you know me in real life, you know that I recommend "Inside Out" (both 1 and 2) way more than an adult usually does. This post gets at some of the reason why.

    When the emotional guardians of our self, (portrayed as Joy, Sadness, Anger, Fear, Disgust; and in IO2 we add Anxiety, Embarrassment, Envy, Ennui, Shame, and Nostalgia) fight it out in our memory, trying to highlight which tonal flavor best fits this moment of experience, it can rupture our existing frame, leaving us with fragments of what we thought we were going to get.

    In huge life-transition moments, it can be completely overwhelming.

    The first movie illustrates a kid version of this, with the collapse of the islands of personality as Riley attempts to fit her old values into a new environment. At the point of desperation, it is the attempt of self-rescue that tear down the apparent islands that are her refuge of self-concept. But it isn't tearing down the actual self, it is just reducing to rubble that which could not be raised any higher upon the foundation it was built.

    Much of what I'm reading here recently resembles the collapsing of the Jenga tower because of the untenable nature of the load bearing assumption that got us to this point, and beyond the previous obstacles that required such an assumption to be built upon.

    Has anyone else noticed the similarity in themes?

    If so, you may enjoy (or at least benefit from) this YouTube video that several months old now between John Vervaeke, Jordan Hall, and Jordan Peterson. This one is dense enough to take slow, but worth the effort.

    https://youtu.be/xOIzDA99xAg?si=F5q0d3zrP-ew2P0t

    https://youtu.be/xOIzDA99xAg?si=F5q0d3zrP-ew2P0t
    stephen•...
    I really loved the way Inside Out 2 handled the complexity of Anxiety taking over and pushing the simplistic fragile earlier self-concept to its breaking point....
    psychology
    cultural analysis
    film critique
    nostalgia
    technology and design
    Comments
    0
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