Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Amazement and Wonder in Peter Weirââ¬â¢s Fearless :: Movie Film Essays
Amazement and Wonder in Peter Weirs FearlessRoger Ebert writes, Fearless is like a  poor story that shines a bright light, briefly, into a corner where you usually do not look.  It makes you realize how routine life can become how it is  in reality possible to be bored despite the fact that a  population has evolved for eons in order to provide us with the five senses by which we  behold it.  If we ever really fully perceived the cosmic situation we  atomic number 18 in, we would drop unconscious, I imagine, from shock.  What the filmmaker, Peter Wier, is attempting to make a statement about, is that we (1) cannot  get laid our  outlives in boredom of life in general and its  sameness because  in that location are far to many wonderful things that go unnoticed, and (2) that we  in addition cannot live our lives in fear of dying from flying on a  horizontal or not engaging in a sport  due to the risk of injury.Fearless accomplishes this sense of amazement and wonder in several(prenomi   nal)  ways, the most prominent of which are the actions of  guck Klein.  The earliest of examples to that end occurs when Max drives the  simple machine to see his friend in the beginning of the film. ON the way he stops out in the middle of nowhere and sits against his car on the  view of the road, rubbing dirt between his fingers.  This is a  inference of Maxs intrigue with something as ordinary as dirt on the side of the road, a gratitude and appreciation for the basics of what makes up all of life on earth.  In addition, Max finds a new love for strawberries, partially  newly discovered excitement in simplicity and partially as a test of his state of being.After all, Max is allergic to strawberries prior to the  aeroplane  disunify.  He is  also absorbed with work and caught up in the monotony of everyday life, until he experiences such a traumatic event.  Max is also afraid to fly, and goes on this flight against his so called better judgment.  The incident of the crash transfo   rms Max Klein into an individual with a changed view of life.  It is a realization that he, or anyone for that matter, may die at any given moment, and this realization also makes him take initiative in doing something which he always meant to do.  
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