As the theoretical basis of Li Zehou's practical aesthetics, "the contradictory duality of aesthetic feeling" has far-reaching influence on China and even the world of aesthetics. In general, "the subjective and intuitive nature of personal psychology of aesthetic feeling and the objective utilitarian nature of social life coexist, that is, subjective intuition and Objective utilitarian coexist." To put it more simply, aesthetics is always the product of the continuous accumulation of personal intuition and social experience. Just like Sun Wukong can never jump out of the Wuzhi Mountain of the Buddha, individual aesthetics are generally not related to the era, country, and society in which they live. The mainstream value systems are too far apart. You can't expect Li Guinian to fall in love with rock music. Going back 100 years, Cao Xueqin may be delayed in writing the beginning of A Dream of Red Mansions... But truly great works of art are often the product of individual aesthetics far exceeding social experience and value system . When Dante wrote the Divine Comedy, Italy was still under the rule of the Holy Roman Emperor. And Rust von Trier participated in the Cannes Film Festival with "I Made This House". It has been seven years since the last time it was blocked by the Cannes Film Festival. During the film festival's release, half of the audience left the show. The historical record... The story of the film begins with a dialogue full of philosophical speculation in a dark place. The old voice comes from Virgil, and the younger voice belongs to the protagonist of the story, Jack. Jack met the chatter Uma Thurman on the way home. Uma Thurman's car tire punctured and the jack broke. At his request, Jack took Uma Thurman to the blacksmith to repair the jack, and then took her back. Send it back to where the car broke down, but the jack broke again, Uma Thurman cheekily got into Jack's car and asked him to take her home. In the car, Uma Thurman joked that Jack was a coward and not a killer. Reassuring her, Jack hit the brakes and smashed Uma Thurman's face with the jack. The film freezes on Uma Thurman's face, and then uses a montage to switch to Juan Gris' painting "Why Not Torture the Terrorists", the composition of the picture is amazingly consistent... In a blink of an eye, the picture switches to Glenn Gould's performance , Bach. Jack cited the architectural principle of the church spire to explain his motive, and Virgil countered: Do you mean that the jack consciously and spontaneously smashed into the face of the deceased? Jack is an engineer by profession, but he has always considered himself an architect. He believes that the difference between an architect and an engineer is that one issues orders and the other executes. After watching a volcanic eruption, Jack self-destructed a house of his own design, and then a second, third...continuous construction, demolishing the house. Jack thinks the problem is with the building materials. Jack started killing people habitually, modeling the corpse before the zombie corpse began, and freezing it at an extreme speed, and imitating the wine fermentation process to make it show a special beauty. Extreme obsessive-compulsive disorder forced him to return to the scene for cleaning many times after committing the crime. His high concentration on art made him turn a blind eye to the police car that was close at hand. His legend began to spread in the society and he was respected as "Mr. Jack argues that truly great art comes from a great adoration of authority, citing the Stuka bomber during World War II, comparing the horror of its siren to the biblical trumpet sound of the Israelites attacking Jericho: After 6 days and 6 nights, the Israelis finally captured Jericho on the 7th day. Jack said that he has seen the most wonderful pictures since he was a child, watching farmers mow the grass together, even breathing, rhythmic movements, echoing the sunset... Jack found a group of victims and wanted to experiment with an experiment done in the concentration camps of World War II : How many heads can be pierced with one bullet. It was soon revealed that, before the police arrived, he completed the art of his life in front of Virgil: a building made of corpses. Jack and Virgil went from the sewers of the cold storage to hell. During the journey, they witnessed scenes of wonders, crossed the Styx, which symbolizes the birth canal, and saw the scene of heaven. At the bottom, the bridge leading to purgatory Broken, Jack insisted on climbing to purgatory, Virgil bid him farewell. Jack falls into the volcano, the picture gradually darkens, and Ray Charles sings "Go on the Road, Jack" and the film ends. In 1995, Rust von Trier published the Daogama 95 Manifesto: it included a series of standards and rules: live action, no props or sets. (Filming must be done at the location where the story takes place.): Cancel the silent source music. 3: Shot with a handheld camera. : Do not create special lighting effects. No visual effects and color filters are used... Under the rules, "This House Is Made By Me" uses a large number of world famous paintings, slideshows, animations, video clips, etc. to make this "PPT" movie a shocking climax. The playful lens language of the film creates a kind of pure fun that is almost childlike. Every line and every scene makes people ponder and linger. Art, especially film art, always needs to break taboos in order to extract pure texture. Nietzsche wrote in "Thus Said Zarathustra", "God is dead, and all traditional moral culture must be re-evaluated", and a new value system should be constructed with a new world outlook and outlook on life. "Superman has a brand-new morality that is different from the traditional and popular morality. He is the person who can best embody the will to life, the person with the most vigorous creativity, and the strong person in life. "At a time when the quality of major movie awards is becoming more and more homogenized, if there are more Rust von Trier, maybe the movie can be saved. We don't need three good students, we only love naughty children.
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