자녀들이 여름에 볼 만한 영화를 고르는 것은 부모들에게 힘든 일이다. 무고한 사람들의 피를 빠는 흡혈귀들이 영화 스크린에서 판을 치고 우리 자녀들은 폭력에 굶주린 영화에 파묻혀 사는 현실에서 그림 형제의 동화처럼 사람의 마음을 끄는 판타지 영화를 찾기가 쉽지 않다.
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수전 필즈 美 신디케이트 칼럼니스트 |
첨단기술의 세련미와 퇴폐적인 상상력이 지겹게 발휘되는 요즘 세상에서 우리는 할리우드가 소박한 사람들의 향수와 이상주의를 적당히 섞은 영화를 만들기를 기대하지 않는다. 하지만 그런 영화를 제작하는 것이 가능할 수도 있다. HBO에서 히트한 시트콤 ‘걸스’는 불행하다고 느끼는 20대 남녀 세대의 목소리를 대변하고 있다. 이 불행한 세대는 성적으로 문란한 생활을, 중산층의 특권과 교육 및 여성 해방을 통해 물려받았다.
그에 비해 독립영화 감독인 웨스 앤더슨이 만든 영화 “문라이즈 킹덤”은 우리를 과거와 신선한 방식으로 연결하는 순수성을 상기시킨다. 현대인들은 그런 순진함을 잃은 지 오래지만, 이 판타지 영화는 우리가 아직도 풋사랑을 믿을 수 있다고 말한다. 소박하고 잔잔한 감동이 이 시대에서도 살아남을 수 있다는 것을 이 영화가 보여준다.
‘문라이즈 킹덤’은 보다 넓은 세상에서 쉽사리 잊히는 갖가지 사소한 감정을 확대하여 보여 주는 작은 세상이다. 넓은 세상에서는 정치와 문화가 정서의 숨통을 누르고 젊은이들에게 아주 빨리 성장하여 부모 세대들의 가장 나쁜 가치관을 흉내 내도록 권고 받는다.
이 영화는 허클베리 핀과 아주 어린 제인 에어가 로미오와 줄리엣에 다시 캐스팅될 경우에 일어날 법한 이야기를 생각나게 한다. 주인공들은 미숙하지만 서로에 대한 열정을 길잡이 삼아 살아가는 왕국에 맞도록 설정되어 있다. 혹은 10대 전반기의 아담과 이브가 지난 잘못을 바로잡을 수 있는 기회를 제공받은 상황으로 볼 수도 있다.
13세 미만은 보호자를 동반해야 하는 등급을 받았으나 이 영화는 아동용이 아니라 젊은 시절을 경험한 우리 모두가 공감할 수 있는 이야기를 담은 영화다. 필자와 함께 이 영화를 본 일부 10대 청소년들은 주인공들이 아래옷만 입고 해변에서 춤을 추는 장면을 보고 다소 역겨운 생각이 들었다고 한다.
그러나 감독의 눈을 통해 세상을 보는 성인 관객들은 잃어버린 자신의 순수함을 다시 생각하고 문화가 아이들의 관심의 폭을 빠르게 확대시키는 방식에 불만을 느낀다. 1960년대 이후 세상이 내리막길로 들어섰다고 한탄하는 보수주의자들은 12세인 두 주인공 수지와 샘이 사랑과 결혼이 말과 마차처럼 함께 가는 것 등 부르주아 가치관을 되살리는 것을 보고 기분이 좋아질 것이다.
이 영화는 또한 언론에서 조롱당하는 종류의 제도를 높이 평가한다. 예를 들어, 이 영화에서 보이스카우트는 생존에 필요한 기술을 습득하는 기회를 제공하는 단체로 묘사된다.
구세대의 실패에 맞서 시정하기를 원하는 청춘의 이상주의를 이 영화는 찬양한다. 10대 전반의 두 주인공은 섹스에 대한 지나친 관심으로 생각이 진부해지기에 앞서 로맨스의 축소판을 발견한다.
어른들에 의해 구조되어 두 사람의 생활이 파괴되기 전까지 두 주인공은 시간이 정지한 섬의 왕국을 함께 찾아낸다. 두 사람은 잠시 동안이지만 순수한 세계를 경험한다. 관객들은 어두운 극장 안에서 그들의 경험에 동참한다.
수전 필즈 美 신디케이트 칼럼니스트
워싱턴타임스·정리=오성환 외신전문위원
Fantasy for a summer's night
By Suzanne Fields
Any parent can tell you that finding a decent summer movie for the kids is a hard day's work. Blood-sucking vampires abound in the twilight zone, children fight to their death in violent hunger scripts, but it's not easy to find fantasy as magically alluring as a fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm.
Between superheroes fighting super egos with over-the-top special effects and men in unitards trying to keep the world safe from evil, it's difficult to hark to a story where an audience can root for puppy love to triumph against natural disasters and grown-ups' obstacles. With our high-tech sophistication and jaded and decadent imaginations, we don't expect Hollywood to mix nostalgia and idealism in a movie with smaller-than-life-size characters. But it can happen.
If "Girls," the HBO hit sitcom, is the voice of a generation of unhappy men and women in their 20s who live the promiscuous life bequeathed to them through privilege, education and liberation, "Moonrise Kingdom," from independent movie director Wes Anderson, recalls lost innocence that links us to the past in a fresh way. It's a fantasy with Hollywood stars that says we can still believe in the power of young love. Touching and tender emotions, too, can survive in a time suffocated by "sophistication."
It's the cinematic pause that refreshes, a momentary summer escape from health care debates and tales of gunrunning to Mexico. Soon enough, we'll have to settle in and take campaign rhetoric as seriously as we must. "Moonrise Kingdom" is the microcosm that magnifies the smaller emotions easily forgotten in the larger world, where politics and culture smother sentiment and encourage the young to grow up too fast, imitating the worst values of the generation preceding them.
The movie evokes what might happen if Huckleberry Finn and a very young Jane Eyre were recast as Romeo and Juliet, who cut out for the territory with only immaturity and passion for each other to guide them. Or better, they're a preteen Adam and Eve who get a brief second chance to get it right.
The movie carries a PG-13 label, but it's not written for children so much as about the rest of us when we were young. In fact, some of the 13-year-olds with whom I saw it found it a trifle icky when the boy and girl kiss and dance on the beach in their nether garments. But grown-ups watching the world through the moviemaker's lens can reflect on their own lost innocence and rue the way the culture has speeded children's attention spans.
Conservatives who rail at a world gone downhill since the '60s ought to revel in how the two 12-year-old main characters, Suzy and Sam, retrieve the bourgeois values, such as how love and marriage go together like a horse and carriage. Wes Anderson has been labeled the king of quirkiness, and his movies attract a cult following well outside the mainstream. This Anderson movie is no exception, but it revives appreciation for the kind of things usually mocked in the media. The Boy Scouts, for example, are shown here learning life skills that are the stuff of survival. Even the bad seeds ultimately find a way to apply these skills on behalf of their better angels.
It's difficult to be sentimental about matrimony (unless you're homosexual) but this movie celebrates a youthful idealism that wants to counter and correct an older generation's failures. The preteens find romance in miniature before the prurient jade their perceptions. Sam brings Suzy a handpicked bouquet of wildflowers, and she carries a suitcase filled with books to read aloud to him in the evening. Together they find an island kingdom where time stops, at least until grown-ups who have botched their lives ultimately find them.
The home life of Suzy, whose parents don't have a clue how to "parent," leads her to wish she were an orphan. Sam, whose parents are dead and who is abandoned by the latest in a sad succession of foster families tells Suzy, emphatically with the wisdom of experience, "I love you, but you don't know what you're talking about."
Hurricanes swirl around them on the island where they pitch their tent, lightning strikes more than once, and maybe they won't live happily ever after. But they have their moment to shine in an unadulterated world, and in the darkness of a movie theater, so do we.
over-the-top:상식을 벗어난, 정도가 지나친 unitard:전신용 레오타드 root for:응원하다 jaded:물린, 싫증 난 prurient:색을 밝히는
By Suzanne Fields
Any parent can tell you that finding a decent summer movie for the kids is a hard day's work. Blood-sucking vampires abound in the twilight zone, children fight to their death in violent hunger scripts, but it's not easy to find fantasy as magically alluring as a fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm.
Between superheroes fighting super egos with over-the-top special effects and men in unitards trying to keep the world safe from evil, it's difficult to hark to a story where an audience can root for puppy love to triumph against natural disasters and grown-ups' obstacles. With our high-tech sophistication and jaded and decadent imaginations, we don't expect Hollywood to mix nostalgia and idealism in a movie with smaller-than-life-size characters. But it can happen.
If "Girls," the HBO hit sitcom, is the voice of a generation of unhappy men and women in their 20s who live the promiscuous life bequeathed to them through privilege, education and liberation, "Moonrise Kingdom," from independent movie director Wes Anderson, recalls lost innocence that links us to the past in a fresh way. It's a fantasy with Hollywood stars that says we can still believe in the power of young love. Touching and tender emotions, too, can survive in a time suffocated by "sophistication."
It's the cinematic pause that refreshes, a momentary summer escape from health care debates and tales of gunrunning to Mexico. Soon enough, we'll have to settle in and take campaign rhetoric as seriously as we must. "Moonrise Kingdom" is the microcosm that magnifies the smaller emotions easily forgotten in the larger world, where politics and culture smother sentiment and encourage the young to grow up too fast, imitating the worst values of the generation preceding them.
The movie evokes what might happen if Huckleberry Finn and a very young Jane Eyre were recast as Romeo and Juliet, who cut out for the territory with only immaturity and passion for each other to guide them. Or better, they're a preteen Adam and Eve who get a brief second chance to get it right.
The movie carries a PG-13 label, but it's not written for children so much as about the rest of us when we were young. In fact, some of the 13-year-olds with whom I saw it found it a trifle icky when the boy and girl kiss and dance on the beach in their nether garments. But grown-ups watching the world through the moviemaker's lens can reflect on their own lost innocence and rue the way the culture has speeded children's attention spans.
Conservatives who rail at a world gone downhill since the '60s ought to revel in how the two 12-year-old main characters, Suzy and Sam, retrieve the bourgeois values, such as how love and marriage go together like a horse and carriage. Wes Anderson has been labeled the king of quirkiness, and his movies attract a cult following well outside the mainstream. This Anderson movie is no exception, but it revives appreciation for the kind of things usually mocked in the media. The Boy Scouts, for example, are shown here learning life skills that are the stuff of survival. Even the bad seeds ultimately find a way to apply these skills on behalf of their better angels.
It's difficult to be sentimental about matrimony (unless you're homosexual) but this movie celebrates a youthful idealism that wants to counter and correct an older generation's failures. The preteens find romance in miniature before the prurient jade their perceptions. Sam brings Suzy a handpicked bouquet of wildflowers, and she carries a suitcase filled with books to read aloud to him in the evening. Together they find an island kingdom where time stops, at least until grown-ups who have botched their lives ultimately find them.
The home life of Suzy, whose parents don't have a clue how to "parent," leads her to wish she were an orphan. Sam, whose parents are dead and who is abandoned by the latest in a sad succession of foster families tells Suzy, emphatically with the wisdom of experience, "I love you, but you don't know what you're talking about."
Hurricanes swirl around them on the island where they pitch their tent, lightning strikes more than once, and maybe they won't live happily ever after. But they have their moment to shine in an unadulterated world, and in the darkness of a movie theater, so do we.
over-the-top:상식을 벗어난, 정도가 지나친 unitard:전신용 레오타드 root for:응원하다 jaded:물린, 싫증 난 prurient:색을 밝히는
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