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  • “I just wanted to make sure that with the movie, we don’t ever feel like it] is putting forward any message,” director Lee Isaac Chung, who grew up in Oklahoma’s tornado belt, [told CNN] “I just don’t feel like films are meant to be message-oriented.”

    I’m sure his parents are thrilled to have raised an artist who is proudly devoid of substance. /s

    • You joke, but probably. That's how you get people producing the sorts of propaganda that works best for conservatives. Its not about anything, its about how just checking out and going along with it is fine. And there's a ton of parents right now who really believe you can tell the story of humanity without telling about hierarchy, slavery, genocide, and war

    • Reminds me of watching some behind the scenes stuff for the film Event Horizon. The director could barely stay in his seat he was so excited that they had had the brilliant idea to 3D scan the interior of Notre Dame cathedral and use that as their spaceship interior. Dude was over the moon. All I could think was, “Yeah, nice job. Way better than designing something original. Truly you are a paragon of the craft, good sir.”

  • Glad to see The Day After Tomorrow mentioned, since it was my first thought.

    I know there are others too, and this Twisters guy saying movies shouldn't have a message sounds really out of place in Hollywood.

    • Honestly, the climate crisis seems to be a subtle or explicit theme of a lot of what Hollywood makes, staring in everything from Waterworld and Mad Max to Pacific Rim and Don’t look up, and if anything might be overrepresented in speculative and science fiction.

      I don’t think that’s a bad thing now, but to say that Hollywood doesn’t have anything that talks about the climate crisis seems to say a lot more about the author’s either media literacy or taste in movies than it does about Hollywood itself.

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