Monday, March 23, 2009

Neverneverland collapse

He does incorporate ideas about the life of dreams in to this film. I also strongly see the stereotype of the artist as child, or Mario as a child archetype. He is constantly in the struggle of wanting every thing and not wanting or being able to make the proper decisions. He is the director controlling the movie and holding the rest of the cast and crew in suspense over the continuation of their lives. He is secretly reveling in the power that he holds. He is doing the same thing in his private life with his wife.
At the end of the film there is the braking point were he must make the choice of what is going to happen. Everyone brakes into song and dance and the ending is happy he has reached individuation/a break through or whatever. Throughout the whole of the film the dream or fantasy sequences just emerge and so that leads to the idea that he really did just break down and that it is his imagination took us out of the film as his only way of coping with his situation.

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