Don’t Look Up - A Problematic Metaphor For Climate Change?

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
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    About this video essay:
    A critical review of Adam McKay’s Don’t Look Up.
    Try Acorn TV free for 30 days by going to acorn.tv/ and use promo code likestoriesofold
    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction
    02:35 Why The Big Short was great
    09:03 Vice, also not bad
    11:22 Don't Look Up takes a different approach
    13:06 The struggle to storify climate change
    14:31 Climate change as a communication problem
    17:19 Why the comet just doesn't work
    19:55 Simplifying the real problem
    25:12 American Exceptionalism
    29:07 Self-caused vs. random event
    32:14 The pain of a disconnected world
    39:31 Epilogue
    Sources:
    Bruno Latour - Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime: amzn.to/3o0kmLo
    Timothy Morton - Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World: amzn.to/3u1NfuA
    Ulrich Beck - Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity: amzn.to/35fs5yA
    Ulrich Beck - The Metamorphosis of the World: How Climate Change is Transforming Our Concept of the World: amzn.to/3Iv4to6
    Madeleine Heyward - Equity and international climate change negotiations: A matter of perspective: www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    Further Reading:
    Like Stories of Old - The Complete Reading List: kit.co/likestoriesofold/readi...
    10 Books that changed my life: kit.co/likestoriesofold/10-bo...
    10 More books that inspired my thinking: kit.co/likestoriesofold/10-mo...
    My Camera Gear: kit.co/likestoriesofold/my-tr...
    Media included:
    Don’t Look Up; The Big Short; Vice; An Inconvenient Truth 1 &2; South Park; The Day After Tomorrow
    Business inquiries: lsoo@standard.tv
    Say hi: likestoriesofold@gmail.com
    Music:
    Ludwig van Beethoven: Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92 (London Symphony Orchestra)
    Lights & Motion - Ghost of You
    Mullaha - Luxury
    Slow Meadow - A Distant Glow
    Madron - Without Illusion
    Slow Meadow - On a Bed of Green Blades
    Brique a Braq - Du Repos
    Slow Meadow - Blue Aubade
    Take your films to the next level with music from Musicbed. Sign up for a free account to listen for yourself: fm.pxf.io/c/3532571/1347628/1...
    Additional Music:
    Dear Gravity - Fire Sleeper
    Borrtex - Light
    Dear Gravity - The Collector

Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @LikeStoriesofOld
    @LikeStoriesofOld  Před 2 lety +302

    A lot of work goes into these videos, if you want to help me make more like them, and get access to exclusive content, please check out my Patreon page: www.patreon.com/LikeStoriesofOld
    What were your thoughts on Don't Look Up? Let me know below!

    • @henrychinaski
      @henrychinaski Před 2 lety +2

      This movie is a metaphor for how the pandemic, hoaxers, covid deniers, and blind loyalty to a political party is dangerous and foolish. It has nothing to do with climate change.

    • @domahug
      @domahug Před 2 lety +3

      @@henrychinaski I don’t think that’s the case. I’m pretty certain it’s about climate change considering the film was “Produced by Hyperobject Industries and Bluegrass Films, the film was announced in *November 2019*”
      If it was announced in 2019 then we hadn’t all gone through the pandemic.
      The general consensus is that it is almost completely about climate change.

    • @donnmckee4973
      @donnmckee4973 Před 2 lety +7

      You're both right. It's a metaphor for people who deny science and the struggle scientist have conveying important discoveries

    • @cheeseburgerinparadise7124
      @cheeseburgerinparadise7124 Před 2 lety +1

      @@donnmckee4973 You are both wrong. Its a logical fallacy, the appeal to authority and the continued and deliberate lack of communication/understanding of WHY people think differently about "the science." Its basically yet another passive aggressive and snarky attack against people that the left refuses to understand.

    • @knowahnosenothing4862
      @knowahnosenothing4862 Před 2 lety +4

      @@donnmckee4973 Not just science, people who deny the truth about reality because science can be bought & paid for to manipulate perception. It's about how most people have their head stuck in group think and are helplessly unable to lift their head from the trough and consume everything that is fed to them.

  • @MarvinRoman
    @MarvinRoman Před 2 lety +5093

    My favorite quote in the movie was “You guys, the truth is way more depressing. They’re not even smart enough to be as evil as you’re giving them credit for.”

    • @nonnobissolum
      @nonnobissolum Před 2 lety +139

      The irony of smugly talking about "smart" but using the wrong they're...

    • @popopop984
      @popopop984 Před 2 lety +106

      @@nonnobissolum We’re not even smart enough to handle English grammar, you think we can defeat the world?

    • @MarvinRoman
      @MarvinRoman Před 2 lety +240

      ​@@nonnobissolum copied directly from a movie quote site directly so... Still I admit that I have never been good at spelling and there is a good chance I would have gotten it wrong. My partner, whose first language is Mandarin Chinese, corrects my spelling pretty often ;)

    • @nonnobissolum
      @nonnobissolum Před 2 lety +27

      @@MarvinRoman It’s all good. Just struck me as funny🙂

    • @asadhussain3446
      @asadhussain3446 Před 2 lety +84

      not a competition, "we really did have everything, didn't we" has to be the best line.

  • @simonelliot3712
    @simonelliot3712 Před 2 lety +6858

    *This movie isn't really about climate change - it's about willful ignorance.* You could swap out "climate change" with virtually any other current topic and the movie still applies 100%. Ignorance will end us all.

    • @leviemmanuelbravo
      @leviemmanuelbravo Před 2 lety +248

      And apathy too!

    • @queny2
      @queny2 Před 2 lety +171

      "Idiocracy" was science fiction of a sort, with something of an elitist lens, while this movie is contemporary and more inclusive satire. It's such accurate satire they could have added a representative set of reviews and other media responses (cough) as the perfect epilogue.

    • @DoctorSess
      @DoctorSess Před 2 lety +79

      The movie isn’t about climate change. It’s about an asteroid wiping out the Earth.

    • @simonelliot3712
      @simonelliot3712 Před 2 lety +154

      @@DoctorSess You basic.

    • @DeepEye1994
      @DeepEye1994 Před 2 lety +33

      @@queny2 Mike Judge said that the opening that shows "poor people breeding more than rich people" was meant to be a joke and he feels very sorry that it instead it unfortunately came off as an eugenics subtext.
      However, I gotta say that the future in Idiocracy isn't ALL that bad.
      It seemed like racism was not a thing anymore, and while dumb as fuck the idiots of the future were still open minded for the most part.
      Hell, unlike the president in "Don't Look Up", president Dwayne Camacho actually recognized that there were issues like dust storms, dead crops and economy, and when he found out about a man more intelligent than the norm, he wanted him to help them solve the problems instead of ignoring them.

  • @theresanoelle
    @theresanoelle Před rokem +622

    the line "we really did have everything, didn't we?" really got me and still does

    • @land_and_air1250
      @land_and_air1250 Před rokem +15

      Yeah it’s a wonderful bit of story telling that is in direct contrast to most traditional stories in that it’s portraying how the world can be messed up beyond that which the heroes can overcome. That the heroes can lose

    • @paulryan2128
      @paulryan2128 Před rokem +11

      My older brother said that exact same thing to me several years ago, just after he realized what the greater implications of climate change will be.
      We are both in our early 80s & don't expect to experience the worst of it, but he has a bunch of kids & grand-kids, and he's a very empathic guy.

    • @bl8388
      @bl8388 Před rokem +1

      Grass is always greener on the other side. That's why the solution is to keep hopping sides throughout our lives.

    • @noahboy7309
      @noahboy7309 Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah, that was my dad's favorite line

    • @willem9688
      @willem9688 Před 2 měsíci

      He improvised the line. 🙂

  • @randy4903
    @randy4903 Před 2 lety +1416

    When I first watched Don't Look Up, I was a little annoyed by the heavy-handedness of it. However, I thought about it and realized that the over-the-top absurd behavior of the various characters is probably how a lot of people who deny or misunderstand issues like climate change appear to experts on those issues, and then I was able to appreciate it a lot more. Like others have said, while it may have been written with climate change in mind, it definitely has a broader message about a society that often ignores warnings it's too late.

    • @arthurfoyt6727
      @arthurfoyt6727 Před 2 lety +20

      Or, that ALL of "climate change" became irrelevant. The realization of having "climate change" put down to it's actual threat level was refreshing.

    • @Andy-gg4xw
      @Andy-gg4xw Před rokem +6

      As I'd paraphrase from Scarlett Johansson from Lucy (2011): "Ignorance brings Chaos."

    • @bigguy7353
      @bigguy7353 Před rokem

      Like the biologists I worked with who had been to the Arctic circle for years on end who challenged the ignorant narrative of sea ice diminishing and polar bears dying. They invited the media and gatekeeping "scientists" to come and see how there is more Arctic ice than ever and look at their firsthand data clearly showing the bears were doing just fine. No one showed up, because the money to be made off the lie is too great a force to combat by 3 people with the truth.

    • @scratchy996
      @scratchy996 Před rokem +27

      This movie is like Starship Troopers. It looks like a bad movie on the surface, but it's a very good satire.

    • @Notsogoodguitarguy
      @Notsogoodguitarguy Před rokem +14

      The problem with heavy-handedness is that, if done poorly, can ruin your message. Short stories for kids are usually pretty heavy-handed with symbolism because kids have very little in the way of grasping concepts. But also, the things that are heavy-handed in children's stories are usually simple and easy and the heavy-handedness is used more to enforce the idea rather than to explain it.
      When you have to convince an adult, you have to make them think they came up with the idea. When you are heavy-handed, like this movie is, it comes off as mocking them. The movie isn't made for experts. Nothing that is made for mass consumption is made for experts and should be targeted at experts. If you're trying to convince general audiences, you don't make them feel stupid. You don't belittle them. It literally never works. You have to make them actually understand and come to a conclusion themselves. This is literally the difference between someone telling you that having your child die is awful and having your child actually die. In the first case, you'd feel a little empathy, but you wouldn't really understand it until you actually experience it. And, like LSO said, when you have something so daunting, complex and hard to comprehend even for the said experts, it's all the more vital to make an actual good movie and not something that's best left in the books for 5-year olds.

  • @tomisgood
    @tomisgood Před 2 lety +5935

    A lot of the critique of seen lately of this movie comes from the idea that it's a failed metaphor for climate change. However, I (going into the film blind) didn't view it as a direct metaphor for one specific issue, and watched it as a reflection of what dealing with any problem in our current "political climate" feels like. How any issue, no matter how clear and obvious a threat, can be politicized and subverted. In that I found the film highly effective.

    • @dragonbane44
      @dragonbane44 Před 2 lety +666

      Exactly. This movie was written before the pandemic and yet it described the politicization of the Covid so well.

    • @hellofriend545
      @hellofriend545 Před 2 lety +376

      I agree that it works on that level, and that’s why it’s kind of upsetting when people say it’s a metaphor for climate change-it’s way to reductive to say this film is “about” climate change and climate denial. It’s not a specific and pointed critique, it’s a general sci fi movie making fun of America’s dystopian inability to address anything in an appropriate and timely manner.

    • @aaRept
      @aaRept Před 2 lety +105

      I thought the same. In fact watching this video I thought that while it is very very interesting and insightful, it is going deep into just one possible way of interpreting the message and really doing a disservice to the movie. I thought the movie was a bit too on the nose at some moments, but I really liked it as a message to what we have become when it comes to dealing with important issues, no matter how simple or complex they are. I may be reading too much into it, but I think it even gave ample flaws to the main characters in the story to illustrate that being right and taking the moral high ground on one subject, doesn't make you flawless all across the board.

    • @samanthaflorence733
      @samanthaflorence733 Před 2 lety +22

      I also watched this movie blindly yet still don't really like the movie. I mean it's not terrible at all. The actors and actresses are great. It's just that I don't get the style of this movie and how over the top this movie tries to represent "ignorance, stupidity, and greediness". I get the point this movie is trying make but because it's so over the top, it feels too unrealistic. More unrealistic than the premise of the movie: "what if a comet hit the world in 6 months". Again this is all my opinion.

    • @YumLemmingKebabs
      @YumLemmingKebabs Před 2 lety +1

      Kinda ironic, because the history of climate change denial actually shows that this "current political climate" has very little to do with that particular problem. It's just made it more visible. We've known about the problem for decades and those in power have continuously refused to address for all that time out of pure greed. The only reason the discussion around climate change has become so polarized now days is because that's the only way those who believe doing something about it will hamper their financial growth can keep us from taking action now with how much evidence we have and how long we've been checking it. Blatantly denying reality is their only recourse.

  • @jonathanfeldheim6554
    @jonathanfeldheim6554 Před 2 lety +2997

    I think the entire movie works better when not tethered to the idea that "it" represents "climate change"---what the movie has to say works better when viewed in the context of how we respond to ANY clear and present danger, climate change only loosely fits that mold

    • @loryndabenson2118
      @loryndabenson2118 Před 2 lety +182

      I agree. I didn't take the comet as a metaphor it was a literal possibility that we've been warned about. How people, especially the government responded was both a caricature and reality. Instead of destroying the comet when they had a chance, they delayed because they wanted to make money off of it. Which is actually what our government (especially here in th USA) does with tragedies. Everything is always about money until it's too late. Money doesn't matter if everyone is dead. That's exactly what it showed.

    • @bisacool7339
      @bisacool7339 Před 2 lety +32

      My critique to his critique of the movie is like this: it's very bad because it's not a movie critique.

    • @melodramatic7904
      @melodramatic7904 Před 2 lety +102

      Yeah, I feel like it's silly to write off an entire movie because it's not a literal metaphor for climate change.
      It works perfectly well as how this current society responds to ANY crisis. Look at what happened with coronavirus. A lot of the things that happened in this movie actually happened in the reaponse to coronavirus. Jennifer Lawrence's meltdown on that morning show ACTUALLY HAPPENED to a female scientist in Brazil. She was going off about coronavirus of course.

    • @courtneyvaldez7903
      @courtneyvaldez7903 Před 2 lety +12

      Same. I kinda forced myself to view it that way and I found it very well done in that regard, despite some lingering shortcomings here and there.

    • @denver7324
      @denver7324 Před 2 lety +18

      @@loryndabenson2118 Imo climate change doesn't fit that mold at all. The phenomenon is not as simplistic as a comet with rare, valuable stuff on it, headed directly towards us with absolute certain destruction and doom. Climate change is a much more nuanced concept. This movie should've instead been an alegory for solely earth-based natural destruction that satirizes standard distaster porn movies like the ones made by Roland Emmerich....and be kept at that only. The further incorporation of something like climate change into that is just poor taste and intellectually insulting.

  • @coolkiddo3110
    @coolkiddo3110 Před rokem +287

    Don't look up is definitely an extremely American movie, which is what makes it so good and creates so much of its flaws. It's like a lot of other people in the comments have said though, I think that this movie was less about climate change and more about the American political climate. How everything is so intense and dividing but at the same time and expression of real meaningful change is seen as radical and alarmist. It's so... Isolating. So seeing it end with loved ones come together after separating themselves further and further throughout the movie was so damn emotional, but also felt too naive.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Před rokem

      Americans hate it because it forces them to look in the mirror and realize we are the source of all our problems. Nobody wants to take responsibility for anything they'd rather divide themselves into factions and blame the other side whether it be climate change, our endless war mongering, destabilizing countries and entire regions of the world, and diseases. Don't Look Up reminds me a lot of The Day The Earth Stood Still even when an alien civilization gave us the choice to change our ways or face extinction in order to save the planet the first thing we do is shoot the guy out of our own fear.

    • @RealLifeIronMan
      @RealLifeIronMan Před rokem

      Yes, America the only country with ignorant people. Yes, I know that is not explicitly what you are saying, but when critics of the ignorance in the world point the blame at the US exclusively and repeatedly, what message does that send? In all seriousness, this is why there is so much division. Americans (particularly right wingers) are mocked and ridiculed constantly; to the point that they have no reason to put their faith in (left wing) scientists because for all they know the whole climate conversation is all just a political talking point to beat them over the head with. If they weren't ridiculed as idiots constantly, maybe they would listen.
      Additionally, asking the US (or really any WEIRD country) to reduce carbon emissions or any other number of things to reverse climate change, is oddly inefficient. The top carbon emitter is China. If people cared about climate change they would ask China, but they don't. Why?

    • @kartikadewi3270
      @kartikadewi3270 Před rokem +1

      Wow

    • @123890antonioj
      @123890antonioj Před rokem +6

      I mean they did all die, I think we can at least reasonably hope that people will come together at their death beds

    • @cheerbearsue
      @cheerbearsue Před 3 měsíci

      MAGA, covid, and anything else that might happen or has already happened recently. Look at the Don’t Look Up rally, looks just like a Trump rally.

  • @obyone878
    @obyone878 Před rokem +438

    The issue is that there was an interview in the UK, recently, that went almost exactly like the interview in this movie. "When did meteorologists become so doom and gloom."
    Edit: UK heatwave GBnews is what you'll want to type in to get the link. CZcams doesn't let me post links, for whatever reason, nor reply to this page anymore.

    • @leonodonoghueburke4276
      @leonodonoghueburke4276 Před rokem +3

      Can you put down a link please?

    • @sauro8911
      @sauro8911 Před rokem

      @@leonodonoghueburke4276 czcams.com/video/bk6YLxxStVk/video.html

    • @lost4468yt
      @lost4468yt Před rokem +1

      Link?

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před rokem +8

      CZcams loves censorship

    • @oliverrobbins2385
      @oliverrobbins2385 Před rokem +9

      But the heatwave WAS overhyped. Should we be concerned about the overall climate trend? Absolutely. Was the heatwave a serious health risk if you didn't act like an idiot and sunbathe all day with no water or something? Absolutely not.

  • @purumr
    @purumr Před 2 lety +961

    "We really did have everything, didn't we? I mean, when you think about it." It became one of my favourite quote.

    • @vijaykumar-nu5gs
      @vijaykumar-nu5gs Před 2 lety +3

      Mine too

    • @AH-yg8xb
      @AH-yg8xb Před 2 lety +22

      It's an interesting quote. It makes me think of the christian basis of our morals. "At least we tried to be good", we can go to Heaven now. The absolution feeling.

    • @purumr
      @purumr Před 2 lety +59

      @@AH-yg8xb I am an atheist, for me it is a page out of stoicism philosophy on gratitude. In the continuous pursuit of dreams we often take what we already have granted.

    • @AH-yg8xb
      @AH-yg8xb Před 2 lety +17

      ​@@purumr I am also atheist. For me the quote represents the typical ingrained christian values on Western society of "feeling guilty" and a "sinner" and our need to find balance in that by doing good and gain our absolution. Check the previous video of this channel about the "Banality of Evil". It is a common trend for our culture to feel guilty and having the need of "at least doing something" to feel good with ourselves.

    • @mattdonalds3310
      @mattdonalds3310 Před 2 lety +8

      My favourite quote was the prayer for Stuff. So appropriate for how Christians really are.

  • @Nightman1997
    @Nightman1997 Před 2 lety +2142

    From my own experience of being a scientist and seeing the way my senior professor gets treated by media/ people that are in higher up gov positions I can attest that the movie is eerily similar to what ive experienced in the real world.

    • @ErutaniaRose
      @ErutaniaRose Před rokem +133

      Yup...I am not a scientist, but I have seen that happen with people who I know that are within scientific fields. I wish capitalism would get out of the way of freaking SURVIVAL.

    • @bigguy7353
      @bigguy7353 Před rokem +1

      Like the biologists I worked with who had been to the Arctic circle for years on end who challenged the ignorant narrative of sea ice diminishing and polar bears dying. They invited the media and gatekeeping "scientists" to come and see how there is more Arctic ice than ever and look at their firsthand data clearly showing the bears were doing just fine. No one showed up, because the money to be made off the lie is too great a force to combat by 3 people with the truth.

    • @bigguy7353
      @bigguy7353 Před rokem

      @@ErutaniaRose Like the biologists I worked with who had been to the Arctic circle for years on end who challenged the ignorant narrative of sea ice diminishing and polar bears dying. They invited the media and gatekeeping "scientists" to come and see how there is more Arctic ice than ever and look at their firsthand data clearly showing the bears were doing just fine. No one showed up, because the money to be made off the lie is too great a force to combat by 3 people with the truth.

    • @marcuskeil420
      @marcuskeil420 Před rokem +15

      @@ErutaniaRose Capitalism is human nature

    • @Raminmarciano
      @Raminmarciano Před rokem +12

      Sure.... mr. Scientist...

  • @bengurwell1500
    @bengurwell1500 Před rokem +74

    Those last 10 minutes describing how everyone is turning inward and existing in increasingly divergent realities really resonated with me and perfectly describes the zeitgeist.

  • @pleasureisgood5957
    @pleasureisgood5957 Před rokem +107

    The real problem is that people won't really care for something unless it affects them imediatly.

    • @RealLifeIronMan
      @RealLifeIronMan Před rokem +4

      That's part of it, but as is said in the video, climate change isn't immediately obvious to one's senses. One must put their faith in scientists. And that is where the issue becomes politicized. In America at least, scientists are known to leverage the citizens' faith in scientists to lobby for their favorite political causes. And that is somewhat understandable, but it does mean trust is eroded.
      Additional some would be hurt more (than others) by reducing carbon emissions. Are we willing to pay that price? Would reversing climate change be worth a miner in India going into poverty and starving?

    • @bl8388
      @bl8388 Před rokem +1

      You're partly correct about that.
      But In the 1980's I ran around chasing all the alarmist predictions about global warming, etc. Most of the predictions were wrong and most of the science still is sloppy and influenced by businesses and political leaders. And not one party, this is a multi-party problem. So many of us also see the problem includes unproven alarmism.
      I would love to see more honesty and reasonable debate from all the sides of this topic. (I don't mean everyone become honest. I mean a handful of people from each social, political side that allow scientific inquiry respectful debate and discussion). Seems like our governments won't even allow that. Tech sector definitely doesn't.

    • @bl8388
      @bl8388 Před rokem +1

      @@RealLifeIronMan And consider how an ice age reduces plant and animal life on the planet more than global warming does.
      Glaciers used to be as far south in the Americas as Pennsylvania. It was the equivalent of far northern Canada in the upper and central USA. That would greatly reduce agriculture, etc.
      That's the problem with our current unscientific assertion that climate change is consistently bad. Climates always change and it's a set of pros and cons.

    • @KingSNAFU
      @KingSNAFU Před 2 měsíci

      Seemingly to me, humanity is great at dealing with a situation when it's looking down the barrel of a gun but when the threat isn't immediate it struggles.

    • @danpaz9485
      @danpaz9485 Před 2 měsíci

      Thats where most of our species problems come from, we cannot truly experience what suffering people have endured unless we put ourselves in their shoes or try to sympathise and understand what they're going through to see why the suffering has happened, thats why you have things like class division, racism, ideological divides, etc. Its something I think is very flawed with our species, we cannot truly know what the person is suffering and try to make things better for them and others, instead we go into our own little bubble and ignore it or completely recognise it and try to do things that are very convenient like donating to charity or peacefully protesting, while they may help, they only give some surface to the problems and in some cases do not make any meaningful change

  • @TheZealo
    @TheZealo Před 2 lety +535

    I didn't think the movie was meant to criticize a specific problem we are not working to solve, but rather how society values have shifted so much that everything is distorted and trivialized to the point of absurdity to satisfy these new values. It critizes multiple aspects, multiple values throughout.

    • @dogleggedhades0
      @dogleggedhades0 Před 2 lety +21

      I mean it's art so it's up to interpretation, but they came out and said it's about climate change. That was the intention.

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Před rokem +9

      It's Hollywood's shallow interpretation of what's really going on in the world.

    • @solarmaru49
      @solarmaru49 Před rokem

      @@dogleggedhades0 have to stop excusing poor decision making from self licensing bad interpretations is literally the point of this film.

    • @dogleggedhades0
      @dogleggedhades0 Před rokem +5

      @@solarmaru49 I don't know what you said because of no punctuation. No offense, just don't understand it. It's literally a movie about scientific facts being politicized for the benefit of the rich. There are also a lot of direct comparisons to the Climate Change situation, which makes sense since it's the oldest, most relevant, example of science being misused for profit. I don't know what self licensing bad decisions means, but if it means misusing science for profit, then yes that's what the movie is about. If not, you are entitled to your opinion but concensus would disagree.

    • @Chaviasmusic
      @Chaviasmusic Před rokem +1

      @@stellviahohenheim I'd say spot on honestly.

  • @damonmuzzy277
    @damonmuzzy277 Před 2 lety +1924

    We watched this on a whim without hearing, or knowing anything about it. We assumed that it a satire about the pandemic. And in many ways I feel that it is actually more compelling when viewed from that angle.

    • @MarvinRoman
      @MarvinRoman Před 2 lety +167

      I think since it’s a systemic critique it works for the pandemic as well. How market logic & profit trumps good public policy no matter the administration. I have asked right wing friends and family what they thought of and they get it even if they don’t apply it to climate change they understand the broader systemic critique. I think that’s what we need to understand is that there is a broad frustration across the spectrum of money coming before people’s lives.

    • @LikeStoriesofOld
      @LikeStoriesofOld  Před 2 lety +272

      I'm pretty sure the movie was written before the pandemic, but yeah I think there's definitely overlap between the pandemic and climate change in terms of how we're struggling to face a global danger

    • @andrewahonen6721
      @andrewahonen6721 Před 2 lety +59

      I saw an interview with the director who advised it was written before the pandemic. Somehow, that makes the film even more frightening.

    • @michaeljohn8883
      @michaeljohn8883 Před 2 lety +53

      @@LikeStoriesofOld Primary production on “Don't Look Up” ran from November 2020 to February 2021, which means it was being made during the pandemic. Screenplays are constantly adjusted and re written as they shoot- as you know. It's a one to one co rellary. The film is about how American handled COVID and magnifies it out to show how it would handle an extinction level event. COVID directly influenced the execution of the material in principle photography.

    • @Maximus-k1
      @Maximus-k1 Před 2 lety +20

      Same here, didn't really think about climate change when watching it.

  • @inflorire
    @inflorire Před rokem +241

    The fact they turned something complex into something simple IS THE POINT. It’s a commentary on how even something so obvious and undeniable can still be treated as an opportunity for profit to the point we do not solve our own problems no matter how pressing they become.

    • @ryanotte6737
      @ryanotte6737 Před rokem +8

      Indeed, I agree with your perspective here. I would argue that the movie also highlights our scientists have done all they can to provide compelling evidence for our current issues, that we are in that phase of the movie where the "comet" isn't visible to the eye yet. Measurements for disease, atmospheric changes, resource depletion, etc, are being treated much like the radio telescope evidence in the movie. If we can't see it, it is not a problem. Yet, the scientists have done all the hard complex work already, and are providing us simple summaries and solution options. Yet we act like the various archetypes in the movie.
      As interesting as the video's proposed change to the movie would be, it may fall prey to what scientists have encountered already, people tuning out complex messaging surrounding long term existential problems. It would be a unique take on a disaster movie, though, what with an asteroid being brought into orbit and chunks of it falling to Earth causing problems.

    • @badaboum2
      @badaboum2 Před rokem +14

      It's a bad point to make. You can make any argument sound reasonable when you oversimplify things so much that you'd have to be evil to disagree,

    • @jacksmith7726
      @jacksmith7726 Před rokem

      Bidens Administration is doing exactly that saying climate crisis is opportunity for profits. But this trashpile of a movie is oh its all those science dining cap wearing dofuses that will doom us

    • @mrkeogh
      @mrkeogh Před rokem

      Reducing complex, difficult-to-solve issues to false dichotomies is a really bad idea when you need room to revise (and then sometimes even reverse) scientific consensus.
      It introduces *absolutes* into the public understanding of science, ultimately undermining confidence in the entire scientific endeavour when our understanding, almost invariably, evolves over time.
      "Oh, those useless scientists! They're always changing their minds, they don't know anything!"
      The abuse of science in so-called identity politics/culture wars has badly eroded public trust, as ideologies attempt to twist scientific credibility to their own ends. We saw the results of this in vaccine hesitancy during the pandemic and the widespread difficulty in battling pretty blatant falsehoods and conspiracy theories. Ironically enough, this dismissal of _science-as-narrative_ so fashionable among post-modernist thinkers engulfed not only parts of the left but also the right.
      A key component of science is clear communication. Climate science needs a Feynman or Sagan, someone who can elucidate all the complexity and nuance in an engaging way: the "remarkable nature of nature" as Feynman used to say. Given the stakes involved, it's strange that so few credible educators have emerged.

    • @buttonasas
      @buttonasas Před rokem +1

      But what value does that have? The solution lies specifically in the part that was omitted - systemic issues. In my opinion, pointing out the part where change is ripe is very valuable, espegially if it's not understood well - and you're telling me cutting that out was the point? I don't care, then!

  • @karan.kk.h
    @karan.kk.h Před rokem +46

    I did my report that makes up 15% of my public exam grade on this movie. It just resonates with me so much as a member of the younger generation, sometimes it feels like your fate is in the hands of people who don’t care

    • @brian2440
      @brian2440 Před rokem +4

      Does anybody really though?
      Even activists don’t actually advocate for decarbonization plans…..
      There are quite literally thousands of published plans on what to do and how to do it, but yet it seems like the entire general publics climate movement is predicated on the belief that only politicians could ever come up with plans.
      It’s truly a mind boggling thing to see, when historically over the last 120 years every single major environmental treaty ever ratified started as a scientific study with conclusions of what was recommended to change. From the Vienna Convention to London Convention to MARSPOL to Montreal Protocol etc, but for some reason the modern climate movement just forgot this for some reason. So instead they shout a scream why a bunch geriatric geniuses, who likely didn’t even take classical mechanics in college, don’t have a plan.
      In the US we have marches on congress to make a plan and take action. Yet you never once hear about any group reference or advocate for any of the hundreds of plans made by the US Department of Energy.

    • @karan.kk.h
      @karan.kk.h Před rokem +3

      @@brian2440 I’m not talking about climate change. When I first saw this film, it never resonated with me as something about climate change at first. It is something that resonated with me because of the political situation of my own home country, not America or Europe

    • @brian2440
      @brian2440 Před rokem

      @@karan.kk.h fair enough but the director of the film point blank said it’s about climate change, but to each their own

    • @karan.kk.h
      @karan.kk.h Před rokem +7

      @@brian2440 film and literature are often up to people’s interpretations and I think general human ignorance and the criticism of self serving leaders are themes of the movie whether it’s about climate change or not. Those themes are what hit me when I first watched it and I did the report on my personal perspective so yeah

  • @ethanbabbage4336
    @ethanbabbage4336 Před 2 lety +278

    "Never assign malice where ignorance will suffice."

    • @waynechen852
      @waynechen852 Před 2 lety +24

      right, because we are all fundamentally good people. All the politicians in the capitals, all the power wielders in global finance, they are all trying to do the right things, they are just..... incompetent?

    • @jesuschristislord7754
      @jesuschristislord7754 Před 2 lety +12

      Never assign ignorance where intent to control is observable by your lying eyes.

    • @MarvinRoman
      @MarvinRoman Před 2 lety +4

      @@waynechen852 actually it’s more because assigning malice points to different solutions that won’t necessarily change things. If it’s just malice then changing people in power is the solution rather than questioning how power works in today’s society. If market logic permeates all decisions, how media covers issues, what politicians actually act on, it begins to permeate the public that actual democratic power held by the demos is off limits. The best we are becomes consumers of brands and political parties and not actually wielding any power. The market rules more and more of life and even politicians and CEO’s are prisoners of the system. Change the CEO of Exxon tomorrow to the head of Greenpeace and watch how much changes when internal incentives and forces remain the same. This isn’t an excuse that those CEO’s or politicians don’t deserve serious consequences, it’s just that what needs changed is structural.

    • @dvdragon
      @dvdragon Před 2 lety +1

      Or general apathy.

    • @ethanbabbage4336
      @ethanbabbage4336 Před 2 lety +1

      @@waynechen852 No, we all have the innate capacity for good. Do you think there are more incompetent people in the world or more actively evil people? Think carefully. And, yes, if you don't believe politicians are incompetent, there is nothing I can do for you lol

  • @sjcraw
    @sjcraw Před 2 lety +518

    The point of using a comet as a metaphor is that even if there was a tangible, singular threat, we still would be unable to get our collective shit together enough to do anything about it.

    • @amethystdawn9476
      @amethystdawn9476 Před 2 lety +8

      Exactly!

    • @oliviastratton2169
      @oliviastratton2169 Před 2 lety +55

      Says who? Humanity has actually fixed a lot of big problems. The hole in the ozone is a good example.
      The issue is that a lot of problems are more complicated than people give them credit for.
      So, instead of honestly examining the downsides of their proposed solutions, they just smear anyone who disagrees as stupid and ignorant.

    • @anakaliahaoa2551
      @anakaliahaoa2551 Před 2 lety +12

      @@oliviastratton2169 We fixed the hole in the ozone when (a) the politicians themselves were less obstructionist and (b) before the ramped up consequences of abolishing the Fair Use doctrine for broadcasting was repealed. The complexity of the issue isn't the core problem. It's the messaging of that complexity that gets bollocks up in our current climate, combined with half our regulators being actively obstructionist. (For the record, I'm not fond of democrats either.)
      If we still had the Fairness Doctrine AND were in the same political place as the late 1970s/early 80s but their climate change was at the level it is today, I have no doubt Gen Z would have grown up with regulations in place to deal with the worst polluters. The proof? Everyone -- as in conservatives, liberals, independents, etc -- used to acknowledge climate change was real and at least partially man made back then. What's changed? The messaging. I.e. what Don't Look Up addresses.

    • @greyfox79007
      @greyfox79007 Před 2 lety +11

      @@anakaliahaoa2551 Banning CFC was to benefit DuPont which had a patent on a replacement for R-12 refrigerant, and was never a worldwide ban. That hole which is still there because it was natural is still there and being used to ban R-134 a because it's patent is about to expire and DuPont has a new replacement.

    • @bigollameo
      @bigollameo Před 2 lety +4

      @@thecommentator9181 Wow, you really didn't understand that part of the movie at all.

  • @albertbeccu
    @albertbeccu Před rokem +42

    Just found your channel - and the quality, not only in terms of picture/clip choices, but the sound and narrative setup is extraordinary. Thank you for making these videos.

  • @paulinatrojnacka5498
    @paulinatrojnacka5498 Před 2 lety +125

    I interpreted the "comet in the sky" scene as the too little too late moment. That, by the time climate change will have these big observable consequences that you can glance at and say "yup that's a climate change alright", it would be too late to really do anything about it. That we should try and stop it now while we have the chance and when you need to trust the scientists that know better, rather that wait for your own proof of it.

    • @madmaxim3965
      @madmaxim3965 Před rokem

      Yeah but that’s his point ,there most likely will never be some huge climate changing moment, temperature will slowly rise and all the small problems will add up and cause problems , I mean what would a event that is a provable climate change event even look like? Some scene out of day after tmrw? Climate change will be a death by a million cuts

    • @neolordie
      @neolordie Před rokem +17

      @@eastbrecht 1 no it wasn't
      2 stop drinking kool aid

    • @xx_amongus_xx6987
      @xx_amongus_xx6987 Před rokem +3

      @@neolordie I think you should start paying attention to the news more, now that the time has passed, a bunch of damning information about the injections are coming out now.

    • @samuelargyropoulos1249
      @samuelargyropoulos1249 Před rokem +12

      @@xx_amongus_xx6987 There really aren't

    • @xx_amongus_xx6987
      @xx_amongus_xx6987 Před rokem

      @@samuelargyropoulos1249 There are, a while back some information about massive health complications came out and the few places that covered it waved it off and said the health complications were still better than getting covid, which is what we call and excuse, and it is besides the point.
      If you know ANYTHING about science or history, then you know that scientists and medical professionals only know so much, and hindsight is a bitch. Talk to your parents about how much scientists/medical professionals know, there's a ton of stuff they were lied to about when they grew up simply because scientists/medical professionals didn't know any better.

  • @remygallardo7364
    @remygallardo7364 Před 2 lety +494

    I personally really liked Don't Look Up. The exaggerated nature of it all that created a sense of disassociation and convolution actually fed into the hazy nature of so many different things going on in the world that seem fueled by ignorance and misinformation. While there may have been a single definitive point the director wished to push toward the nature of the message and its application so so many simultaneous chaotic problems elevated my appreciation for it as a whole. The raw, incredibly serious emotional outbursts scattered throughout the otherwise near-slapstick level expressions of ignorance dug deep into me as the struggle we face daily when we check the news and see each day that The Onion is getting closer and closer to legitimate news and nothing seems to be rallying against it.

    • @whizzerbrown1349
      @whizzerbrown1349 Před rokem +14

      Same here! I thought it was a fun movie with a good message. It wasnt exact sharp or subtle but it didn’t have to be

    • @danc42421
      @danc42421 Před rokem +19

      I know this is late but the video got recommended to me. Which parts were exaggerated? I see people saying its "heavyhanded" and "exaggerated" but I'm pretty sure we've seen the exact same scenes play out with scientists and media, in multiple countries. We've seen the politicization of chocolate, m&ms, masks and anything in between. People saying this movie over the top are tripping, if anything the movie ISNT crazy enough.

    • @matsab7930
      @matsab7930 Před rokem

      Agreed. i think you're not going to enjoy it if you look at something like Trump's presidency and can't acknowledge what an absolute failure it was. I think there's too many people living in literal fantasy worlds currently, totally detached from any factual basis and not really equipped with the tools to critically think properly.

    • @rajeevvaishnav2018
      @rajeevvaishnav2018 Před rokem +6

      @@danc42421 it's not mundane like the real life and has a background music, in other words we're desensitized to facism and over the top stupidity the real world brings, that's the reason tucker Carlson talking about m&m doesn't seem that absurd and nor America's supreme court unconstitutionally banning abortion.

    • @thiccandridicc
      @thiccandridicc Před rokem +1

      your very first sentence for not liking the movie is why i enjoyed it lol is that not the real world today?? the ones in power get the people freaked out with exaggeration so as to not lose that power or have people become aware and fight back?

  • @themightyquyn
    @themightyquyn Před 2 lety +571

    Good video, however the fact that they chose a comet was irrelevant. The point was to illustrate to the viewer the social, governmental, and corporate gridlock we experience when evidently staring into the face of our own destruction even though we can do something about it.
    I agree with the premise a comet isn't the best way to illustrate our own contribution to changing this impending doomsday scenario. It was only chosen, because it's a movie and people seemingly have short attention spans. Climate change wouldn't make for a good worldwide disaster film. The Day After Tomorrow's cataclysm doesn't work too well for "Mckayan" satire.

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant Před 2 lety +1

      This movie?
      It was not a Mirror at all.
      And it’s not the only terriblee Clima-Change-Coverage: Chris Chibnal probably did the Worst ever, as pointed out by Many, including Jay Exci.
      Meanwhile, epic coverage would be various Science-Channel as well as the 2 Social-Commentary-Channel Hbomberguy and Some More News.

    • @helloitsjay38
      @helloitsjay38 Před rokem +10

      @@loturzelrestaurant what?

    • @Nevouti.x
      @Nevouti.x Před rokem

      He says that lmao wtf are you on?

    • @helloitsjay38
      @helloitsjay38 Před rokem +2

      @@Nevouti.x Loturzel restaurant says... that? What does that mean? Am I having a stroke or are you?

    • @Nevouti.x
      @Nevouti.x Před rokem

      @@helloitsjay38 no the guy making the video both of you commented on, seems like you are

  • @Justmyhandle
    @Justmyhandle Před rokem +134

    My first impression of Don't Look Up was that it felt like the current generation's Idiocracy. I honestly didn't make the climate change connection until later (I figured the story could have been about virtually any imminent threat to the Earth and/or humanity and achieved the exact same core-narrative), mainly because I wasn't paying attention to the debate surrounding it. I rarely go on Twitter and follow tweets even less.

    • @albusking2966
      @albusking2966 Před rokem

      except for nuclear war, are there any imminent threats to humanity that are approaching?

    • @Justmyhandle
      @Justmyhandle Před rokem +3

      @@albusking2966 I don't know, off the top of my head, but I also don't think I'm the person to ask. I was speaking in context of this fictional world though. For purposes of the film's story, I believe any significant enough threat could have potentially worked.

    • @matsab7930
      @matsab7930 Před rokem

      @@albusking2966 Climate change is the imminent threat. I'm no eco nut, but you have to acknowledge that it will probably be what we spend the next 100 years trying to beat.

    • @rajeevvaishnav2018
      @rajeevvaishnav2018 Před rokem +1

      *current generation*
      half of the movie was about conservatives being the bad guys how you came to the conclusion that the Gen-Z were the problem in the movie, like Gen-Z is literally painted as the wokest leftist generation of today that do talk about climate change the same way "alarmist" do
      edit: welp just looked at your subscriptions and that's explains alot on why you think an entire generation is idiot to you and why you subconsciously omitted the cartoonisly exaggerated mockery of conservatives in the film

    • @Justmyhandle
      @Justmyhandle Před rokem +7

      @@rajeevvaishnav2018 *"How you came to the conclusion that the Gen-Z were the problem in the movie-"*
      I didn't. My perception was that human idiocy, ignorance, and selfishness in general were the problem, not a specific ideology or party. I didn't interpret it as "Conservatives bad", "Gen-Z bad", "Leftist bad", "Woke bad", or anything like that. I didn't do a head count of which characters were of what affiliation.
      I did perceive a commentary on how human society & communication were negatively impacted by social media. Again though, I don't view that as Gen-Z's fault (though they definitely haven't helped). I did see the not-so-subtle parallel to Trump, but that's about it. I did see that the film gets political, of course.
      But I wasn't absorbing the plot through a political lens. When I said "current generation's Idiocracy", I meant that it struck me like a film made in what was then the current year that reminded me of an movie made years ago with a similar theme or vibe. That's all that phrase means to me unless someone specifies otherwise.
      To elaborate, "the current generation", in my mind, referred to the film existing within a new generation and those living at that time being its audience. No more, no less. There was nothing political intended in that statement. It's no different to me from saying "New Girl feels like Friends for the new generation."
      This is honestly the first time I've heard someone interpret "current generation's" as you have. It's surprising, because every person I've ever used that wording around when discussing media understands what I mean and didn't feel a need for me to re-word it. Likewise, many people used that wording with me.
      *"Just looked at your subscriptions-"*
      I did used to look at subscriptions of people I was debating to get a sense of their views before. And, speaking from experience, that's rarely a reliable way to discern their true views. Assuming someone is Conservative, Liberal, or whatever based on what they watch on CZcams is just that, an assumption.
      You may argue that it's a reasonable assumption to make, but I'd disagree in this instance. It would only reasonable if/when you find evidence that the person watching those channels agrees with said channels' views. All "evidence" you believe you have about my views is based on a misinterpretation you made on a comment I wrote about a movie that happens to paint certain groups/demographics in a negative light.
      To clarify for others who may read this (not that my subscriptions are a secret by any means), like many CZcamsrs I've met, I watch channels foremost for entertainment value. I may agree or disagree with them, but I'll still watch them if they entertain me. I listen to people across the political spectrum, and my opinion will depend on the individual issue. I don't subscribe only to people who think like me, nor do I do a head count of their affiliations.
      *"That explains a lot on why you think an entire generation is idiot to you-"*
      I don't view Gen-Z as a collective of idiots. There are idiots among every generation, including mine (Millennial). Two of my sisters are Gen-Z, and they're they're two of the sharpest people I know. We don't always agree, especially on politics, but I respect their POV because I don't judge intellect strictly through a political lens either. We're all individuals. Being of a specific generation or other demographic doesn't dictate one's intellect (not saying you said otherwise).
      *"- And why you subconsciously omitted the cartoonisly exaggerated mockery of conservatives in the film"*
      I "omitted" nothing, consciously or otherwise. That's another assumption on your part. Few attempts at arguments are more fallacious or potentially arrogant than to presume you know anything about a stranger's unconscious mind, let alone that you know it based off comments & subscriptions. Again, I used to do this.
      Since then, I've realized that "unconscious bias" is a flawed premise for multiple reasons and most informed people won't likely take you seriously if you cite it (Nobody I know of would likely be impressed by your combative approach to dialogue either). I say this with no malice, disrespect, or condescension intended.
      Perhaps you'll see at some point in the future how you can benefit from this interaction, just as I benefitted from learning the flaws in my thinking years ago (which is not to say or imply that my mind is now flawless). Also, I'm well aware that the portrayals of everyone (not just Conservatives) were very exaggerated.
      Almost nobody in the film was portrayed with anywhere near 100% realism in mind, regardless of party or ideology. They weren't all equally cartoonish, but none of them struck me as "real". They were all exaggerations serving a narrative to some extent. We can glean themes from them that are applicable to the real world.
      But the same is true for what messages + commentary can be taken from Idiocracy, which is also full of cartoonish mockery & caricatures (Admittedly, I'd consider Idiocracy to be significantly more cartoonish by comparison than Don't Look Up). If you have any other questions to clear up, let me know.

  • @michaelbond4807
    @michaelbond4807 Před rokem +18

    I appreciate the brilliance of your analysis in this video! Your educational background and capacity for detailed, critical analysis gives your listeners a fully realized portrayal of the complex issues involved in mobilizing a critical mass of people around the climate crisis as opposed to a comet heading for earth. i am thankful that you present these arguments on CZcams where your audience is so much wider than that in a classroom at university or to a conference of academics. Please keep on keeping on!

  • @enotdetcelfer
    @enotdetcelfer Před 2 lety +867

    This movie perfectly captures how it's felt to have every issue that comes up be met with people strawmanning, caricaturing, laughing amongst themselves and largely disconnecting from each other. We're humans suddenly fighting a flood of information and connection that has paradoxically pushed us farther apart by giving us so much content and so little together time that we can't process things properly anymore. We're naturally breaking off into tribes of monoculture perspectives that then enforce this socially, and seeing people with different eyes and concerns as threats to our power and stability. Virtue and honor has become subjective even in every-day political topics that should involve communities at a moderate level and be discussable and negotiable.
    This movie captures the sense of panic one can feel when you look out and see no learned thinkers or skilled orators taking on the necessary task of digesting issues in a way that includes different perspectives and attempts to start the dialog of chewing in the social brain; it captures the lead up to idiocracy where things still feel intelligible, but the understructure has started to erode and people are walking on the bridge laughing while you see some small grains of sand or a pebble dislodge itself when walking in the long forgotten catacombs of dialog.
    When Leo's character screams out to be terrified, it's not talking about climate change or the asteroid specifically, it's that our culture has venerated the wrong things and we're all looking to medicate problems, detach from uncomfortable things, to avoid each other and to not hear, and to watch this devolution over the last 20 years has been scary. It could be any disaster, it's not about that, it's about how we're all children in adult bodies with adult jobs and bank accounts and our skills at facing our problems and fellow humans is that of children on the playground. Even the scholars are so far up their academic disciplines while watching politically charged nonesense strawman peddlers on mainstream TV. They look down on their neighbors and act like it'd be fine if they all died because their beliefs are wrong and evil. How many times in the last 20 years have we heard "I just don't get how..." blah blah blah insert some position the other has taken. Or if they do understand, it's some patronizing or condescending "that's why they're getting defensive or projecting and I can understand it in those terms but they need to be shown the light, maybe I can reach them" instead of trying to inhabit their hierarchy of societal concerns and see how to negotiate a solution that does them justice.
    This movie is a preview of society that has completely lost the ability to pay attention and to listen, and to listen well. Do we ask questions or do we dictate. We're all so bigbrained philosophers in our own minds while not stepping out to understand and to speak up for and include those that oppose our solutions. And boy are we tied to solutions and the form things take instead of being dynamic, creative, inquisitive creatures whenever ideology makes us uncomfortable.
    Anyway, sorry for the rant but I couldn't sit down to watch this without first getting this off my chest, and hopefully I can watch your analysis with more openness, I'm just anxious that this is going to be 40min of missing the point about a movie about missing the point and that would be depressing coming from you. This movie is a mythology that captures our current state of affairs. It does it without pointing the finger from one to the other and creates, or rather finds, intermediate characters that split up the strengths and weaknesses of current people in unusual combinations that challenge us to look at the humanity, not the ideological tribe, giving us something approachable to chew on, truly like stories of old. It does the campfire task of coming together and looking at the meta in a personal and instantiated what-if. Ok, anyway, /rant

    • @vaydust
      @vaydust Před 2 lety +17

      Thank you for this commentary!

    • @Sasquatchbones
      @Sasquatchbones Před 2 lety +12

      Bingo

    • @BK2207
      @BK2207 Před 2 lety +11

      It is a fair assessment.

    • @L.K.48
      @L.K.48 Před 2 lety +9

      Poetry

    • @ryanjohnston5909
      @ryanjohnston5909 Před 2 lety +34

      I appreciate your rant, and although I don’t comment on things often, I did want to say thank you. To me, the movie felt very human.

  • @RizztrainingOrder
    @RizztrainingOrder Před 2 lety +150

    Your work is infinitely interesting and much appreciated, you impact more people than you know! Keep up the great work and I pray this message finds you well!

    • @bryansantanavegas1910
      @bryansantanavegas1910 Před 2 lety +1

      Ye, not really, look at that views/likes ratio

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant Před 2 lety

      @@bryansantanavegas1910 This movie?
      It was not a Mirror at all.
      And it’s not the only terriblee Clima-Change-Coverage: Chris Chibnal probably did the Worst ever, as pointed out by Many, including Jay Exci.
      Meanwhile, epic coverage would be various Science-Channel as well as the 2 Social-Commentary-Channel Hbomberguy and Some More News.

  • @jordanmorgan4864
    @jordanmorgan4864 Před rokem +11

    So far, I am greatly enjoying your videos. You think deeply and put forward well-considered ideas. I don't always agree, but I am enjoying learning more about how you see things. Wonderful job, and thank you!

  • @Player-re9mo
    @Player-re9mo Před rokem +11

    I liked the 2016 Godzilla movie more. We see how bureaucracy, lack of communication and outdated strategies prevent the government of Japan from fighting Godzilla. It's only when the young people come up with new ideas, that they manage to defeat the monster.
    I liked the movie more because the problems they had seemed like problems we have as well and the characters felt real, despite being in a Godzilla movie. But in "Don't look up" felt cartoonish in comparison. The characters were exaggeratedly dumbed down to the point I no longer felt bad for them being hit by the comet.

    • @KingSNAFU
      @KingSNAFU Před 2 měsíci +1

      Watching Don't Look Up tonight and I feel the exact same way.

  • @r.connor9280
    @r.connor9280 Před 2 lety +16

    Asides
    That thing the Big Short does is called an Aside, it's borrowed from theater drama. Where the character directly states something to the audience for dramatic irony

  • @courtneydurham8429
    @courtneydurham8429 Před 2 lety +247

    I loved this movie. I don't get why people think it's controversial. It was cathartic in a dark depressing kind of way. I thought the social commentary was spot on and that the people who were pissed off by this film are the people who saw themselves in the characters that were acting badly.

    • @jackalopewright5343
      @jackalopewright5343 Před 2 lety +9

      Yes!

    • @charlestonianbuilder344
      @charlestonianbuilder344 Před 2 lety +6

      well if your being perfectly portrayed aka a republican then ofcourse its controversial, you were portrayed not as some good guy but as a fool, i saw most people could'nt even finish the movie though i get it, as it did get boring at times, then they complain of social media without finishing the film

    • @KurtAngle89
      @KurtAngle89 Před 2 lety +22

      While you can think like that, there's actually many people who didn't recognize themselves, and still found faults in the movie. Reality, is, luckily, more complex than your understanding of it

    • @ashyslashy3636
      @ashyslashy3636 Před 2 lety

      @@charlestonianbuilder344 You're EXACTLY the type of person I thought about when watching the movie. Clearly the president and her followers were meant to portray trump and his followers from the point of view of people like YOU. Calling republicans fools and saying they're "perfectly portrayed". Its hilarious because you're just like them. Blind, ignorant and afraid of opposing views. And anyone that disagrees with you is horrible in your mind. You, are the fool. Its "controversial" because it makes fun of trump, if ANY movie made fun of biden it would be canceled because people would lose their shit. So much hypocrisy. As someone who enjoyed the movie and has a very open minded political mindset, I gotta say the way they portrayed republicans is the SAME way I see both right wing extremists and left wing extremists. You're both bad and you're both annoying. Just itching to throw a jab at the opposing party. Dude, live your life, stop being full of hatred and letting these republicans live in ur head rent free.

    • @surprisedchar2458
      @surprisedchar2458 Před 2 lety

      Because it feels like Hollywood grabbing you and shaking you, going “GET IT!?! DIVISION BAD! NOW PRAISE US FOR BEING SMART!!!!”
      Hollywood long ago lost the favor of quite a lot of people. Being heavy handed and borderline propagandistic is not a good way to win them back.

  • @BaynexoMusicOfficial
    @BaynexoMusicOfficial Před rokem +9

    The movie to me is a perfect metaphor for how humanity doesn’t give a shit even though the future of life is in our hands

  • @seanawesomemega
    @seanawesomemega Před rokem +3

    Really great piece! This is the first video I've seen from this channel and I'm excited for more. It's nice to have thoughtful media analysis like this especially from someone who so obviously knows the material.

  • @lewisguapo
    @lewisguapo Před 2 lety +9

    The real question is: Why did the general charge for the snacks?

  • @imdiyu
    @imdiyu Před 2 lety +109

    When I watched this film, I correlated it more with Covid than Climate Change, for the reasons you mentioned in this video. But, you said it better. It brought me tears.

  • @KumoTheCatto
    @KumoTheCatto Před rokem +47

    I really like your closing thoughts about us people only wanting to build our own paradise. I think that one of the greatest problems of our society is the ever growing divide between us. Which is pretty ironic if you think about how connected we all are these days. And I really think that one of the reasons for that is how superficial our world has become. So it's truely important to actually talk, and think about a topic and actually go deep in my opinion. This is also a reason why I love your detailed movie analyses! So I hope you can keep making them for a long time :)

  • @kevnar
    @kevnar Před rokem +7

    For me, the real point of this movie was the tragedy of human stupidity and greed. I actually got choked up when that pop star was singing that song near the end. If only we all weren't so stupid and selfish. Imagine what we could accomplish.

    • @andrukthegreat
      @andrukthegreat Před rokem

      Look back 100 years ago and you ll realise we ve acomplished quite a fucking LOT !

  • @utkashdubey8458
    @utkashdubey8458 Před 2 lety +122

    The Big Short is a great film. This doesn't have much to do with this video, but I want to add that it gets (at least) two major components wrong about the crisis ("wrong" might be a bit inflammatory).
    1 - in the blackjack scene with Selena Gomez and Richard Thaler, the movie describes how the crisis was multiplied due to large, but wholly independent side bets. In other words, A makes a bet with B, C makes a bet with D, E makes a bet with F, and so on. This isn't a problem. The real problem was that these side bets were not independent, and created debt cycles: A bets with B, B hedges by betting with C, C hedges by betting with A; none of them know that they're in a cycle, so when B goes bankrupt, C can't pay A anymore and everyone loses.
    2 - the film fails to mention that bad math was fueling the heart of the crisis-the incorrect pricing and risk evaluation of mortgage-backed securities. Margin Call correctly makes the discovery of this bad math the driving engine of the film.

    • @xxChacaronXX
      @xxChacaronXX Před 2 lety +2

      Would it be fair to say that the point 2 is wrong because it wasn't about math but greed? There's a scene in the movie where they say something along the lines of "Who cares man... they want it and they'll pay for it" Almost like... it was hmm greed and and ignorance.. Donno... I bet you guys are smarter than me(not sarcasm)

    • @utkashdubey8458
      @utkashdubey8458 Před 2 lety +9

      @@xxChacaronXX I understand the sentiment, but no it wouldn't be fair to say point 2 is wrong. Bad math very literally was the reason the risk assessment of MBS products was so broken, and therefore banks were strongly incentivized to push mortgages to anyone with a pulse
      However, it would be fair to argue that greed (and "if it ain't broke, don't fix it") prevented the bad math from being corrected before it was way too late. I think this is the common sentiment in the industry

    • @moscanaveia
      @moscanaveia Před rokem +1

      @@utkashdubey8458 Maybe the promise of a big payoff made the bad math more difficult to spot? Our brains are severly biased, and it's a bit dismissive to say the culture of the financial market would be so careful as to not rush into the promise of quick payoffs and recklessly underestimate associated risks?

  • @4-kathryn
    @4-kathryn Před 2 lety +108

    My favorite aspect of 'Dont Look Up' were the Scientists fight with the (fluff) news channel to explain the situation to the public. You explained yourself that our changing climate and everything that's connected to it.. it's difficult to put to words. I think this fictional film did a stellar job conveying that message.
    Overall I did appreciate your review and I'll add, 'The Big Short" to my films-to-watch queue.

    • @citoante
      @citoante Před rokem

      Too bad a "scientist" doesn't really mean anything anymore. They are more like pseudo prophets. People believe in "science" - whatever that means, but it is actually pseudo religion. Believing in a scientific process is completely different thing. Science itself is political. Science of the unknown is about consensus that may or may not be correct. It is not science in the true meaning of the word, but it is presented as one. Climate change is a dogma that must not be questioned and the new profits from this change are not to be questioned either. If I do not believe in climate change I am a heretic.

    • @Arlae_Nova
      @Arlae_Nova Před rokem +2

      Expect the big short to blow your mind. It's legit a million times better than Don't Look Up. It's crazy that it comes from the same director honestly.

    • @4-kathryn
      @4-kathryn Před rokem

      @@Arlae_Nova I'll add it to my watch list, thanks

  • @silashurd3597
    @silashurd3597 Před rokem +37

    I really love how this movie sorta accurately portrays how society acts nowadays and does make you think how the world, especially in our society would react if a world ending event happened

  • @untorelander1444
    @untorelander1444 Před rokem +2

    Amazing work, the analysis of film and society is really eye opening. Glad i found your channel!

  • @donnmckee4973
    @donnmckee4973 Před 2 lety +49

    "I don't think it was quite able to capture what the actual harm of climate change looks like"
    That's not what the movie was trying to do. It was trying to show how people react to science that says "something bad is coming we need to act". Some panic, most ignore it or actively campaign against the idea. All while the scientist pull their hair out trying to convey the truth.

    • @derek96720
      @derek96720 Před 2 lety +12

      Exactly. This movie is a textbook illustration of how the politicization and monetization of science erodes the public trust in scientists themselves, who are supposed to be impartial.

    • @derek96720
      @derek96720 Před 2 lety +6

      @Hatchback OfNotreDame the average person neither knows how solar orbits work, not is capable of using equipment to find one as it enters our system. Yet we ALL trust when scientists say one could likely impact us. Climate change is not some nebulous science that requires a doctorate to understand. It's basic science and ecology. The problem is everyone wants to argue about the cause, rather than simply deal with the effects.

    • @bgoodfella7413
      @bgoodfella7413 Před 2 lety

      @@derek96720 The only people "arguing about the cause of climate change" are right wing propagandists and brainwashed conservatives. Everyone else already knows burning fossil fuels is the main cause. It's not complicated bruh.

    • @derek96720
      @derek96720 Před 2 lety +3

      @@bgoodfella7413 actually there are multiple significant causes. Another is factory farming, ie the cattle industry, which puts out unprecedented amounts of methane into the atmosphere. Another cause is that the Earth is in a natural heating cycle on its own, as it's gone through numerous times in the past. Climate change is going to happen one way or the other, but we're greatly exacerbating and accelerating it.

    • @bgoodfella7413
      @bgoodfella7413 Před 2 lety +3

      @@derek96720 Agreed. Plus it is a self reinforcing loop. The problems grow exponentially as oceans get all fucked up.

  • @thisguy8106
    @thisguy8106 Před 2 lety +4

    You at your desk is up there with Margo in a bubble bath.

  • @pauletteemerson1052
    @pauletteemerson1052 Před rokem +1

    Everything you describe in the last bit of this video has been what I and I'm sure many others have been feeling for some time. I can't help but wonder, what have we become. I was glued to every word and I was mesmerized by your descriptions of it all.

  • @something_subliminal3364

    the end of this video was genuinely moving. thank you so much for making this

  • @samrudhnayak6482
    @samrudhnayak6482 Před 2 lety +3

    This video is beautiful Tom! I love how you put across your insights and tell the story in a compelling way.

  • @4Usuality
    @4Usuality Před 2 lety +61

    The point about interpersonal communication completely breaking down, that I see every day. Lord how many times have we all seen our wonderful technology ruin society. Time after time, person by person, scandal by scandal. How many more kids are going to get an iPad shoved into their face instead of a teddy bear before people realize how much spending time matters. My parents are older. I never thought I'd see the day when parents care more about themselves than about the life they begat. I'm not super religious, but lord have mercy on the selfish, they know not what they do. Myself included.
    You always bring back your videos into something that really makes me think, and I thank you for that. Communication and technology in society are one of the biggest things I would ever consider advocating for.

  • @IAmNumber4000
    @IAmNumber4000 Před rokem +7

    I felt the same way after watching the movie. There are so many fascinating sociological critiques to be made about climate change but Don’t Look Up settles for surface-level outrage and frustration about climate inaction, which means the true depth of the problem is being missed.

  • @BhbtheRock
    @BhbtheRock Před rokem +4

    The problem with waiting for the "we saw it with our own eyes" moment is kinda ubiquitous in media. I've been reading Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy, and in that the moment is half of the Antarctic ice shelf falling into the sea.

  • @ObviousCleft
    @ObviousCleft Před 2 lety +24

    You remain my absolute favourite creator on this platform. And you’ve made me cry on the train home.
    It’s so nice that you’re putting a bit more of yourself into these, too. I feel like I’m getting to know a friend I always would’ve liked to meet personally.

  • @neofromthewarnerbrothersic145

    I took it as not necessarily a metaphor for climate change, but science denialism in general. Made me think of covid more than climate change, but that's probably just recency bias because my anti-vax sister was here. I saw in other comments that the script was written before the pandemic.
    But naturally, the point of metaphor is that the specific "thing" doesn't really matter, it's more about the effects and causes and behaviors around it. As always you got right to the heart of the matter in a way that I wish everyone could hear.

    • @badaboum2
      @badaboum2 Před rokem +1

      But the specific thing does matter, science is about specific things. Otherwise it's just a general sense of appeal to authority.

    • @neofromthewarnerbrothersic145
      @neofromthewarnerbrothersic145 Před rokem

      @breyzh2jahkady Science is about specific things. Narrative allegory isn't. That's why they used a comet instead of just making a movie about climate change.
      There's no appeal to authority when the experts themselves are showing the evidence and showing their work, and people still refuse to listen. That's what happens in the movie, and IRL with climate change. If anyone cries "appeal to authority," it's purely out of ignorance, and they were never going to listen anyway.

    • @badaboum2
      @badaboum2 Před rokem

      @@neofromthewarnerbrothersic145 Right, but the allegory sort of falls flat when your movie is ABOUT science and complex policies that affect millions of lives. Dumbing issues down this much makes it fail at representing them, imo.

  • @acuencadev
    @acuencadev Před rokem

    I saved this video in my watchlist when it came out. I should have seen this before. Man, your work is beautiful as always.

  • @Sssilk84
    @Sssilk84 Před rokem

    Dag Tom, toevallig vandaag op je kanaal gestuit, maar direct geabonneerd. Geweldige video essays met wat mij betreft de perfecte ambiance en boodschap. Keep up the great work!

  • @Pineapplesf
    @Pineapplesf Před 2 lety +12

    The reason it's about America is because it's a response to America pulling out of the Paris accords. As Latour says, a response not to the left and right but the "out of this world." It's not about the world's response, but those who ran away from the problem -- the best embodied by the US. It was meant to acknowledge and show the elephant in the room... that some countries are bigger players than others and each of these must work together (including the US) if we want to succeed. I think more a UN or EU focused would muddy the waters of these points.
    It has been awhile since I saw a film lean so far into an exclusive American audience -- using a lot of American cultural narratives and slang.

    • @thirtythree504
      @thirtythree504 Před 2 lety +2

      America was the only country doing anything about the climate. Thats why we pulled out

    • @fingernecklace4817
      @fingernecklace4817 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thirtythree504 do... do you really believe this?

    • @OtherDAS
      @OtherDAS Před rokem

      @@fingernecklace4817 The numbers clearly show the US did more to reduce carbon emissions than others. Are you unaware of this? the only thing staying in would have done is cost the US a lot of money.

  • @MrCabbidge
    @MrCabbidge Před 2 lety +14

    Fantastic video. I agree that Don't Look Up was most interesting when it talked about how the world we've created makes it so hard to talk to each other, rather than the apocalypse beats it tells.

  • @dohlecarnett1866
    @dohlecarnett1866 Před rokem +2

    This was honestly one of the best video essais I saw on CZcams! Congrats!
    I think the metaphor worked with its intention to put a worldwide and existential problem directly in our face. I see the problems with it though.

  • @jasonhayes7995
    @jasonhayes7995 Před rokem +17

    Thank you for doing your best to explain a very nuanced position by looking at all different angles before casting judgement. I feel like this is something I should have done when I was seriously opposed to a certain political figure before - Its like I was the majority of kids in class when we were given that activity where the first instruction was to read all the instructions before beginning. I went around quacking like a duck and wondering why my introverted friend hadn't started yet. Wasn't until the end that I realized that I was the one making a fool of myself.

  • @frederikhauff9129
    @frederikhauff9129 Před 2 lety +76

    The uncomfortable truth is that we routinely get hit by meteors, and i actually found the movie to be a very on point critique of todays society. Its like the documentary step before the events of the movie "Idiocracy". In other words, how serious the planet would take an extenction level threat makes this the second installment of an unofficial trilogy: Deep Impact, Dont look up and Idiocracy.

    • @sbraypaynt
      @sbraypaynt Před 2 lety +14

      Idiocracy is a mediocre film and extremely misanthropic. The picture it paints of a future has themes supporting euthanasia of stupid people or we’re all screwed. It’s the fan-fiction of a 13 year old girl with a Hermione complex.

    • @edoardoruini199
      @edoardoruini199 Před 2 lety +5

      @@sbraypaynt You're right, but the movie knows, its exaggerated for the sake of humour, it doesn't want to be the groundbreaking eyeopener that Don't Look Up aspires to be. Not all movies are made to change the world. I don't even think Idiocracy is THAT fun but it is at times exactly because it doesn't take its premise seriously at all.

    • @donnmckee4973
      @donnmckee4973 Před 2 lety +8

      @@edoardoruini199 bwahahaha Dont Look Up is not aspiring to be a "groundbreaking eye opener". What a silly thought. It knows its exaggerating and plays on it. It's about how people react to scientist saying "we have something coming and need to act". Some panic but most ignore it or actively campaign against the idea. If you truly came away thinking this movie was trying to be groundbreaking then I'm sorry for your diminishing intellect. Theres nothing groundbreaking or eye opening about people ignoring science. They just made it satire and a meteor instead of the current problems we have. You are the first person I've heard say it was aspiring to be groundbreaking and eye opening. Wow

    • @FritzEschkobar
      @FritzEschkobar Před 2 lety

      I thought about Idiocracy too watchin DLU

    • @vikitheviki
      @vikitheviki Před 2 lety +5

      Idiocracy is one of the most underrated movie ever..

  • @petertromp8786
    @petertromp8786 Před 2 lety +62

    Those who have been the most vocally outraged by the movie - the corporate media elite, predominantly - were clearly upset about being so mercilessly caricatured, but then their reactions have been so disproportionately over the top that they in effect ended up self-caricaturing, thereby proving the movie's point.
    Don't get me wrong, I'm not in love with the film: I think it's great in some respects, and significantly lacking in others. What cannot be denied is the way it has so publicly ruffled the feathers of those it specifically targets, which makes it an undoubted success. It's not a normal movie for normal times, and it did it's job damn well in that respect, even if by normal movie standards it's a mixed bag. What it has done unbelievably well is bait those it critiques for living in insular corrupt bubbles to expose themselves for living in insular corrupt bubbles

    • @dazey8706
      @dazey8706 Před 2 lety

      my thoughts exactly

    • @bgoodfella7413
      @bgoodfella7413 Před 2 lety +3

      Every American lives in "insular corrupt bubbles". It's called your head.

  • @paintingtracey
    @paintingtracey Před rokem

    Your voice is so soothing! This made me cry. There is a heart breaking futility to hoping for a better outcome. But the alternative is equally heartbreaking.

  • @esleodi
    @esleodi Před 2 lety

    I came in for a film essay but going out with something more substantial. Thank you, man. God bless!

  • @thegraceofwriting9092
    @thegraceofwriting9092 Před 2 lety +35

    Your insight into how we are (mistakenly) taking our privileges for granted really shed light onto my troubled mind. For years I have been living with the feeling that something is coming to an end in our society, and until now, I thought that we are just going to perish. But after pondering your words, I am starting to understand that what is coming to an end is the illusion. Thank you for your work!

    • @freetibet1000
      @freetibet1000 Před rokem

      Let’s make sure that illusion is not replaced with another illusion then. Unfortunately, that’s what usually happens though. In fact, illusion is such an interesting phenomena. We all like to live and breath our own type of illusion and it only becomes annoying when someone else wants to impose their version of illusion upon us, isn’t it? Are we sure that our thoughts and values are absolutely free of illusions? Do we really have anything that we can hold as an illusion-free mark of reference in life? Isn’t it all just a make-belief reality we live in?
      Conflicts arise when illusions seems to contradict each other. Some illusions we hold dear and some other we reject. Our anger arise due to a righteous belief that our own illusions are under threat, isn’t it? “How dare someone threaten my own dear illusions?” We will then go on a long journey of righteous soul searching to find reasons why our own make-belief stories are more true that others. After that we will try to find a platform from whence we can proclaim our version of illusion to be the superior one. Then we start a political movement. After that we are so engrossed in own creation that everything else in life becomes unimportant and a veritable threat to us, we think.
      Isn’t virtuous intention a far more useful factor to improve upon in our lives than trying to pick and choose among a myriad of illusions that we think suits us the best? Isn’t a genuine care for the lives and happiness of others a far better illusion than any other personalized illusion we can come up with?

    • @Gettothegone
      @Gettothegone Před rokem

      Society just like anything else is cyclical. The west doesn’t view civilization through this lens (due to late stage capitalism) but we’re on the decline in the west and will shortly see the US lose its unipolar standing.

    • @freetibet1000
      @freetibet1000 Před rokem

      @@Gettothegone Good comment. Anyone studying nature knows that nothing is permanent. That doesn’t mean we should stop trying to do our best in whatever endeavor we’re engaged in. I don’t think you believe that either, right?

  • @dormin100
    @dormin100 Před 2 lety +7

    It'd be nice to have this video translated so i could send it to my friends and family. I loved it! Great writing, informative and mature.

  • @FreeXenon
    @FreeXenon Před rokem

    Holy crap!
    Such great thoughts and coverage.
    I have really learned a lot from this video!

  • @Xyles7
    @Xyles7 Před rokem +3

    I believe the comet metaphor has a different goal. Perhaps the movie wants to show us that even a much more real, predictable and timely event like a comet impact can be completely ignored in our current society. And that this ignorance and mixture of emotions and political views can lead to our extinction.

  • @hogpsking33
    @hogpsking33 Před 2 lety +3

    Looks like we read a lot of the same stuff in grad school. Great job summarizing these big ideas. You should do more of this.

  • @markpeters2317
    @markpeters2317 Před 2 lety +3

    this was one of the most well spoken commentary videos I've ever seen!! Your analysis of McKays films was excellent, and you perfectly described the issues with Don't Look Up. (I loved the story, but I was also thoroughly irritated the entire time watching hahaha). He definitely seemed like he's out of touch on this one.

  • @Coffee_Is_Magic
    @Coffee_Is_Magic Před 2 lety

    SO HAPPY TO HAVE STUMBLED ACROSS YOUR VIDEOS!! ❤

  • @tridra5714
    @tridra5714 Před rokem

    What an incredible thing you said. It truly made me think about things that I have not thought as much about as I felt I had. Not exactly the eminent doom and gloom but how difficult it is nowadays because of how we have limited ourselves and chased luxury instead of global prosperity

  • @alexanderm3504
    @alexanderm3504 Před 2 lety +11

    Your videos and breakdown are awesome, would love to see your take on 3:10 to Yuma with Russel Crowe and Chritian Bale

  • @mikearchangel7998
    @mikearchangel7998 Před rokem +9

    I am so glad you brought up the big short because I appreciated so many of the decisions the movie took to portraying it's premise. Don't look up I feel in my mind came up short in ways that I think are minute because I think like stated it served its purpose in brining up the topic to strat up conversation. A bit of of an anecdotal story: I remember sitting in a biology class sometime before 2017 when we were talking about virology. we had a conversation about a world wide pandemic and my teacher literally stated in most possible scenarios world governments operate too slowly and retard the process of a quick response to an actual pandemic not to mention how many people would actually agree to a proper response to one. And what happened about 3 years later? Well. I certainly think these things are worth taking about nuances, sincerity and empathy I feel are all important. All of which you eloquently pointed out. 10/10 video

  • @land_and_air1250
    @land_and_air1250 Před rokem +3

    I think the comet is narrative omen symbolizing the “end times”. By the time the comet was scene by the naked eye, the world was over. The heroes lost and had already admitted defeat. By the time it becomes apparent to everyone in nakedly plain terms the tragedy is too late to avoid. The last part of the movie is just the antagonist winning and the hero’s trying their best to live out their remaining days.

  • @kukicu
    @kukicu Před rokem

    This is an excellent, excellent, vidéo. Just wow. And it git better and better as it went on. Bravo 👏👏👏

  • @b1g_m00n
    @b1g_m00n Před 2 lety +53

    "Uhm, I couldn't really think of a smart segue, but this video is sponsored by" _thank you_ . whenever something a creator was saying turns out to be a "smart segue" I roll my eyes, so the sincerity here actually made me smile. also I'm glad your work has been supported, because it's really good and deserving.

  • @dilffred5464
    @dilffred5464 Před 2 lety +4

    Bro, Great editing and analysis.(1) loved the exposition on McKays cinematic language (2) banality of evil is such a rich message to get across, its compelling, I want more movies to showcase it (3) loved the part where you said something like, "I couldn't get Margot Robbie in a bubble bath to explain this. So here is me at my desk."

  • @josie_the_valkyrie
    @josie_the_valkyrie Před rokem

    Brilliant analysis! You've convinced me to watch it.

  • @dottoysm
    @dottoysm Před rokem

    I came here looking for critiques about “Don’t Look Up”, what I got was an amazing, deep critique into climate change and all its causes too. Excellent video.

  • @tywalz
    @tywalz Před 2 lety +4

    My goodness brother. You outdid yourself once again with this video.
    I was going saddened to see you were going to make a video about Don’t Look Up, but here I am. Completely blown away by your insights and comparisons. I could feel your passion from your real world studies engrained throughout the video.
    I think you referencing The Big Short breaking the 4th wall, but then breaking the 4th wall in your own video is something special too. Even if your not Margot Robbie in a bubble bath.
    Thank you once again for your content.

  • @AfutureV
    @AfutureV Před 2 lety +41

    The way I see it, we all have to make some big sacrifices to help, but not enough will. And because of the unique nature of Climate Change not being an obvious singular threat, the blame will always be shifted. From individual consumers to big corporations, both will pass the blame to each and never make significant enough changes.
    Humanity has always cared about its present and never about its future.

    • @thirtythree504
      @thirtythree504 Před 2 lety +9

      Maybe because the same people telling us about climate change like gore and Obama also buy beach front property while they cry about rising sea levels

    • @anthonymartensen3164
      @anthonymartensen3164 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thirtythree504 I'm sure they have also done way more to do something productive than the average person though.

    • @hidolu3104
      @hidolu3104 Před 2 lety

      @@anthonymartensen3164 like what?

    • @gabbar51ngh
      @gabbar51ngh Před 2 lety +4

      @@thirtythree504 hypocrisy runs deep among the left. Their staunch stance against nuclear reveals everything.

    • @nadiaromantini8836
      @nadiaromantini8836 Před 2 lety +3

      Well global warming definitely is primarily the fault of corporations, not individuals.

  • @rufarochiswo1879
    @rufarochiswo1879 Před rokem +1

    the way you scripted the last chapter of this video was absolutely beautiful

  • @DadsCigaretteRun
    @DadsCigaretteRun Před rokem

    Excellent video, thank you for the analysis

  • @aaronlane1134
    @aaronlane1134 Před 2 lety +28

    Love your videos!!! It's funny how a movie about how the world is so divide that we can't save it is itself divisive.

    • @jesuschristislord7754
      @jesuschristislord7754 Před 2 lety +1

      There's no common ground with people who have no respect for God's creation.

    • @sbraypaynt
      @sbraypaynt Před 2 lety +4

      @@jesuschristislord7754 there’s also no common ground with religious people

    • @Birrrrra
      @Birrrrra Před 2 lety +11

      Lol these 2 guys just proved your point 😂

    • @jesuschristislord7754
      @jesuschristislord7754 Před 2 lety

      @@sbraypaynt there's no common ground with unenlightened maya mon.keys of Clown-Yuga who literally groom children and call it virtue.

    • @remychadwick2467
      @remychadwick2467 Před 2 lety +4

      Maybe because the film is really just pretending one side of the divide is all that the problem is

  • @BenCaesar
    @BenCaesar Před 2 lety +3

    Yeh I saw it as a pandemic critique honestly. I felt they caught the feeling of suffocation in rage and having nowhere to vent it. Really enjoyed it tbh.

  • @user-nz6xd5cu4n
    @user-nz6xd5cu4n Před rokem

    The best review channels on CZcams. Years ago I remember one evening just smiling while watching.

  • @clara.wireddot384
    @clara.wireddot384 Před 2 lety +1

    this video is the best analysis of Don't Look up that I ever seem. Thank you.

  • @Tyler_W
    @Tyler_W Před 2 lety +39

    I definitely think it's a much more scathing, albeit unwitting condemnation of the national and international Covid response. It works more as a commentary about society in a crisis in general more than it works as a direct allegory for any specific issue. It gets a bit on the nose at some points, but it also kind of redeems itself because it actually manages to be funny in places while also not really being one-sided about a multifaceted scenario. Basically everyone is responsible to one extent or another for ruining the party, and no individual or group is free from the satirical lense. I mostly enjoyed it, but my biggest issue is that I feel like it didn't quite know what it was trying to be because of how it wafted back and forth between obvious satire and serious drama. It would've worked much better if it just went hard into the absurd. As far as the kind of satirical story it was trying to be is concerned, while I appreciate this movie on an entertainment level, Dr. Strangelove: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb did it better (although to be fair, saying a Stanley Kubrick film did anything better than most other movies is like saying water is wet, so that's not saying all that much). The worst thing the people behind this movie could have done was to say "this is what the movie is about" and try to make it an obvious 1:1 allegory, because that immediately made it a reductionist, one-dimensional understanding of the issue they're talking about, and it hurts broader conversation about it, at least in my opinion, because it has more interesting and thought provoking things to say about media manipulation, exploitative corporate greed and political interests, and how even regular people abuse the discussion of real issues just to virtue signal score tribal points, all without actually having honest, serious and empathetic conversations about the issues at hand, whatever it may be, be it a climate crisis or literally anything else.

  • @coltekr
    @coltekr Před rokem +4

    Everyone seeing things from different perspectives is something that was bound to happen in this advanced information age. Because of this, it has also become much easier to see the problems and abuses among our society that was invisible before. That is not a bad thing, of course it will make us depressed and cynical because most of us can’t do anything about it. But it helps for some of us to be aware so we can at least try to pave our way to a better future, one step at a time.
    I liked your video, although I haven’t seen the movie yet.

  • @yaboirogers6342
    @yaboirogers6342 Před rokem

    I like the video so much, I'm going to watch the entire ad read.

  • @obsidianagent
    @obsidianagent Před rokem +9

    Thank you for pointing out that this IS a prisoners dilemma! I kind of always SAW the situation, but my brain did not click into connecting it to that phrase!

  • @billgoedecke2265
    @billgoedecke2265 Před 2 lety +74

    The review has good points, especially regarding the section on the Big Short (great film). Although I think that most people don't take the metaphor as literally as I do. It is not about gradual climate change, it is about abrupt climate change which will occur with the same immediacy as the comet. For example, when the ice is mostly gone over the Arctic Ocean, the entire surface of the ocean will be exposed to 24 hour sunlight during the summer. Of course, dark surfaces absorb short-wave radiation whereas white surfaces such as snow and ice reflect that radiation out to space (more or less). That will be a tremendous amount of energy being absorbed into what was once surface covered with reflective ice. There are huge stores of methane in the shallow continental shelves in the form of frozen clathrates which will be destabilized by the increasing heat of the ocean - in normal situations that methane is absorbed by methane eating organisms. However, the shallowness of the ocean depth and the amount of methane being destabilized will cause large blooms of this gas entering the atmosphere. There was a mass-extinction event that happened 252 million years ago theoretically due to this phenomena (the end-Permian extinction). So, yea, it will occur and human extinction will occur over a short period of time. I think this movie is referring to something of this nature which will only be perceived at the time of its occurrence. And the metaphor also works regarding the search for wealth, as that is also what is occurring in the Arctic - as the ice sheet recedes, there is a rush for access to perceived mineral and oil resources. Regarding the commenter, below, who says that the movie doesn't show the benefit people receive from using fossil-fuel powered technology, I think that person is correct, although I see he clearly does not see the utter danger ahead. Cheers.

    • @natwilson9338
      @natwilson9338 Před 2 lety +7

      damn, this is bleak, especially considering that companies/countries in the north actually WANT the arctic to melt so they can have quicker trade routes

    • @talus9663
      @talus9663 Před 2 lety +13

      @@yeussean The big thing to think of is the temporal scale. In short, the drastic change in climate over the last 200 years is unprecedented and directly linked to global industrialization. The fact that we came out of an ice age approx. 10 thousand years ago is almost irrelevant.

    • @johnlinsky19
      @johnlinsky19 Před 2 lety +1

      @@talus9663 both of those points are wrong. greenland ice cores and medieval warming period.

    • @huitzilopochtlisexy9975
      @huitzilopochtlisexy9975 Před 2 lety +19

      @@yeussean Most scientists agree that climate change is a fact, so there shouldnt be political bias in scientific books regarding climate change. Maybe you are from the USA but in Germany climate change is an accepted fact by all the political parties(even the conservaties). I cant recommend you any books, because I havent read any. It would be for me like reading a book about why the earth is a sphere (it could be interesting to know the facts behind the roundness of the Earth, but I think is easier to just as google it if i need to do some fact checking) Also at school in Germany we talked throughly about it.
      It also depends what you consider unbiased, I believe in scientists. If you go to climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus you will find 18 american scientific associations that state that climate change is happening and is a result of humans, go further below and you will find 200 other scientific associations around the world that state the same.
      I think if you google how does climate change works or why fossil fuels contribuite to climate change you will find all the answers to your questions. (this comment is already long enough)

    • @donjindra
      @donjindra Před 2 lety +1

      @@talus9663 There has not been a dramatic change in the climate over 200 years. The change is not unprecedented.

  • @AirShark95
    @AirShark95 Před 2 lety +56

    I'd love if you take a look at "Arcane". While not a film, I think it does a fantastic job at building incredibly complex characters with very human and relatable traits. It's a show that explores the complexity in a society divided by the haves and have-nots, the hidden costs of progress, as well as the impact trauma and loss can have on a person. It explores the grey zone many characters find themselves in and how each one has a unique but humanly flawed way at a achieving their goals.
    It was an incredible surprise for me since I was not expecting this show to be this good and memorable. The story and character development is sublime, and when combined with a beautiful animation style, impactful soundtrack and heartfelt voice acting it delivers emotions that are missing in most mainstream media nowdays. The characters in Arcane felt more real than those in many high-budget films or series, even live action ones. That's a solid testament to how well crafted "Arcane" is.
    Personally I think it is a MASTERPIECE and will definitely set a new benchmark for Western Animation. I think it is worthy of a detailed review at exploring the power animation has in telling a story that is memorable, impactful, and beautiful.

    • @palimondo
      @palimondo Před 2 lety +1

      I second this.

    • @arianathough2070
      @arianathough2070 Před 2 lety +1

      Definitely second this

    • @FlutterStark
      @FlutterStark Před 2 lety +1

      Omg i loved arcane although i dont think is a masterpiece is AWESOME anyways... riot really understand how to use the same techniques that spiderman into the spiderverse used in animation and despite those techniques aren't something new they manage to do something great and original for their series

    • @Duiker36
      @Duiker36 Před 2 lety +1

      @@FlutterStark Riot had nothing to do with Arcane besides supplying the base character and setting concepts.

    • @tfly999
      @tfly999 Před 2 lety +1

      This is the best suggestion yet. Your essays need to be paired with that masterpiece.

  • @terencebelprez8158
    @terencebelprez8158 Před rokem +1

    was looking for this video that I vaguely remember seeing. Your analysis is very refreshing and thought provoking. It feels that the political environment today is so toxic that it maligns the issues at hand today

  • @OUTSIDER40
    @OUTSIDER40 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for making this video 👍

  • @valipunctro
    @valipunctro Před 2 lety +37

    I think the comet metaphor is more accurate that we give it credit.the point is that when its close enough to be seen in the sky its way late to do anything about it,as with climate change,when we will personally see it's consequences its way to late to do anything.
    I do grant that orbital mechanics is child's play compared to climate models.

    • @Dina8485
      @Dina8485 Před 2 lety +6

      I think he makes the point that we may not see climate changes’ effects drastically in the US and other first world countries, but other third world countries and impoverished communities are already feeling the drastic changes.

    • @lebleu8843
      @lebleu8843 Před 2 lety

      @@Dina8485 The earth has gone through worse, mankind has gone through worse. This will break nations but its not the end of the world.

    • @galactic85
      @galactic85 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Dina8485 exactly. The effects are already being seen but not equally. Hell they are already even becoming more common in the United States. The pacific northwest just had a major heat wave over the summer that was unprecedented in my lifetime.

  • @clarkkotte3069
    @clarkkotte3069 Před 2 lety +27

    This was absolutely brilliant and neccesary to hear. As someone who works 40 hrs a week and am doing a graduate degree simultaneously I feel as though I have sunk into a solitary world where all I have is work. And that yes, it does all feel like a dream, and one that is not altogether pleasant. Thank you for making this video.

  • @StorytellingHeadshots

    You have an amazing voice!
    I enjoyed this video essay!

  • @cmfrtblynmb02
    @cmfrtblynmb02 Před rokem

    You are one of the few channels that the video essay format is not just about the style but the content.

  • @KarlWinterling
    @KarlWinterling Před 2 lety +28

    My takeaway from Don't Look Up is pretty much: You can't just sit back and wait for the government, companies, or activist groups to save everyone. You have to do your best with the resources/skills/influence you have, and it isn't a simple guilt vs. innocence moral issue or something that depends only on individual behavior.
    When I talk to right-wing friends or family about systemic problems using that type of framing or explanation, they actually get it.

    • @yungmentalproblems
      @yungmentalproblems Před 2 lety +3

      Systemic systems of institutional racism

    • @bohansenboh
      @bohansenboh Před 2 lety +3

      It's true that we all have a part to play in controlling what we can when it comes to existential threats. However, part of doing what we can does entail mobilizing vast systems of bureaucracy to generate a coordinated response to said threats. And in order to achieve maximum functionality of society these bureaucratic systems need to be occupied by people who have a base-line understanding of the threats and the severity of the threats. My biggest problem with republicans and democrats is that they tend to vote for people who purposefully ignore societal problems in order to generate a profit for themselves and their friends and family. This is understandable to some degree, but we don't have time to indulge these behaviors. Republicans are especially egregious when it comes to electing the willfully ignorant and they get away with it because Democrats are guilty of corruption too. It just seems that, you can have all the personal responsibility you want, but if there is not a systematic approach to the betterment of these situations, then there really isn't a point to "doing your part". It's better than doing nothing, but if you don't have the means to do much than not much gets done. That's why it's imperative that those with bureaucratic power take proportional action. And although it is scary because, people with that type of power tend to abuse it. It's also necessary if you're actually trying to combat something like climate change or the pandemic or systematic racism and incarceration. These are large complex problems that require large complex, robust solutions and just collecting rainwater for instance or heating your house with natural gas or buying a Tesla or having a green house or installing solar panels or wearing a mask in public or all of the above doesn't necessarily address some of the most urgent problems that we face when dealing with these issues. They are helpful and good things to do, but (taking climate change for example) they don't reduce the problem of over-fishing or natural habitat destruction that leads to climate change in the first place. So there has to be a national and/or international mandate that incentives the changes needed to actually combat global warming. Or take the pandemic, wearing a mask in public is a good thing to do, but it doesn't address the fact that you're 41% less likely to transmit the virus if you're vaccinated and have the booster shot. I mean you name a complex problem and there is a government solution that should be implemented but won't be even if we continue to think and act in a personally responsible way, because what's fantastic for one person can often be detrimental for another.
      As someone with a very conservative family I commend you for your effort to inform and reach a common ground, however being responsible doesn't end at personal responsibility. There also has to be accountability. That's one thing that Republicans are much better at then Democrats, however it seems like the Republican ethic falls short in almost every metric when it comes to national and now even local oversight.
      Sorry this response is so long, but it's a complex issue and I felt it required robust consideration.

    • @KarlWinterling
      @KarlWinterling Před 2 lety +3

      @@bohansenboh I agree with you.
      I think also that the movie's main limitation is that, realistically, you need a large bureaucracy filled with competent people to deal with systemic problems. Systemic problems tend to have a disparate impact based on economic class, gender, race, disability, etc., and the asteroid metaphor doesn't adequately capture all that even though it's a better place to start than "wokescolding" everyone you talk to. People often talk about systemic marginalization in a way that's far too abstract or theoretical and only confuses people.

    • @bohansenboh
      @bohansenboh Před 2 lety +3

      @@KarlWinterling Woke scolding I like that I've never heard anybody say that, that's super funny. I mean I get what you're saying and I definitely think you're right about disproportional impact of climate change or covid and obviously incarceration. Sometimes I just like to piss into people's ear buds on the internet, there's like 10 billion people on the planet you just happen to be the one that I picked. Cheers dude

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Před 2 lety

      @@KarlWinterling Women, non-whites, and ethnic and sexual minorities in societies established by straight, cisgender, Christian (especially Protestant), white males are the most privileged whiners on the face of the planet.

  • @Padtedesco
    @Padtedesco Před 2 lety +4

    Im gravitating more and more towards the following understanding:
    Mckay and Sirota got a good Idea to a movie dealing with the denialism towards climate change by a comet metaphor, he made the script, selected the actors and them Covid hit. Those involved started to see the similarities between the script and the reality, Mckay Itself need to rewrite some parts of it and in these process something change, he put more and more of what he saw on the news, on the world, on the previous movies like "the big Short" (which is a kind of story about denialism deraliing), and with that the emphasis changed towards corporate motivated scientific denialism as a large, incompassing climate.
    And despite he still saying that it is a movie about climate, it works even better as a move about scientific denialism as a whole, and that is how not only how the majority of those who liked it understand the movie but it is a refreshing not told before tale who usuallly recieve marginal or at best secundary plots in conventional movies. We know tales about people not being heard, but they are old, not dealins with our current post-truth and social media environment.
    And somehow that second interpretation kind of ressonate with the Zeitgeist of our current generation.

  • @ABCshake
    @ABCshake Před 2 lety +1

    "I just happen to have a master degree on environmental sociology" has to be best humble flex i've heard in a while.