this post was submitted on 12 Oct 2024
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Personally I think movies are never as good as a medium like books, TV series, video games, comic books when it comes to telling a story. There is a lot of rigidity when it comes to movies owing to their running time, the average wait time between successive entries to a movie series, and the assumption that they are meant to be watched uninterrupted.
My favourite pieces of media are Disco Elysium and a comic book series and their way of storytelling is a big reason I like them. It cannot be replicated with movies.
I'm willing to concede that the movie format can be used in more creative ways but as things stand it is entirely at mercy of big corporations (the producers and the theater cartel).
I'll agree about the rigid format of movies but to say that's why I think movies have the greatest impact on me of any media.
A movie is a very tightly packaged combination of art forms that has to hit all the right brain pieces at all the right times because they have such a limited amount of space to do it in.
The greatest movies are those that can keep you completely focused for two hours and affect you for days after. They are able to masterfully execute on all art forms at once.
Even for great books I generally read them in multiple sittings which at least temporarily takes me out of their world. Games are an even greater collection of arts in that they also add an interactove element, but they're often so long that I never quite get fully into the stories. I ran into a soft-lock in Disco Elyseum that caused me to have to re-load a save and redo some pieces. That experience isn't too uncommon in gaming but it's something that would never stand in a movie.
Basically I think the greatest movies are those that manage to affect me so so much with such tight constraints.