WEIRDLAND

Friday, April 27, 2012

"Donnie Darko" will always be our masterpiece

Donnie's crush Gretchen (Jena Malone) says when she meets him, “Donnie Darko? What the hell kind of name is that? It's like some sort of superhero or something.” Donnie replies, “What makes you think I'm not?”

That's the crux of the film: Donnie, like every kid growing up in these patently insane times in which we are constantly threatened by mass destruction and death, must see himself as a kind of crazy superhero in order to survive the despair that chews at his mind.

It's a state that “healthy” people grow out of, forcing our anxiety below the surface and hiding in denial and compulsive rituals – but it's one that lingers in the shadows of our dreams, perhaps driving us slowly mad over the course of years, until the world no longer resembles anything acceptable to a sane mind.

True art is one third intent, one third technique, and one third public perception. That's the magic of it – that we are all partial participants in the creative process for every great work.

Intentionally or otherwise, Donnie Darko will always be a masterpiece, and, more importantly, it will always be our masterpiece. Source: www.buzzinefilm.com


Steven Poster, president of the International Cinematographers Guild (ICG, IATSE Local 600), will be a key speaker as part of the World Intellectual Property Day celebration in the Library of Congress in Washington D.C., April 26.

Poster will show a clip from Donnie Darko, a film he shot and discuss how digital theft threatens the future of the motion picture and television industry.

This event is organized by the Copyright Alliance, a non-profit, non-partisan educational organization dedicated to the value of copyright as an agent for creativity, jobs and growth. Source: www.btlnews.com


Jake Gyllenhaal attending a private party on April, 25

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

"Singin' in the Rain" (Symbolism and Interpretation): An Alternative View

I consider "Donnie Darko: An Alternative View" as one of my best articles/interpretations I've ever written, maybe it's due (from a sentimental point of view) to being Richard Kelly's cult classic "Donnie Darko" the subject of one of my first serious analysis in film criticism.

Another film which has similarly gotten such a hold of me lately is "Singin' In The Rain", which deserves on its own classic merits a new essay, this time related to Sigmund Freud's symbolism theories, also invoking the themes of matriarchy and incest that can belie its gleaming surface. Here is my postulation: "Singin' In The Rain, allegory and symbols". I've used as examples for my thesis fragments from "Freud, Psychoanalysis and Symbolism" by Agnes Petocz (1995)

Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly): -I can't get her out of my mind.

Cosmo (Donald O'Connor): -How could you? She's the first dame not to fall for you in ages.

Don Lockwood: -She's on my conscience.

Sigmund Freud regarded conscience as originating from the growth of civilisation, directed its energy as a superego against the person's own "ego" or selfishness. According to Freud, the consequence of not obeying our conscience is guilt; Freud claimed that both the cultural and individual super-ego set up strict ideal demands with regard to the moral aspects of certain decisions, disobedience to which provokes a 'fear of conscience.'

Film director: -What's your name?

-Don Lockwood, but people call me Donald.

Freud often uses 'symbol' in the sense of metaphor, and he allows that the concept of a symbol cannot be sharply delimited: it shades off into such notions as those of a replacement or representation, and even approaches that of an allusion.' "Lockwood"´s name seems to be an allusion to "Hollywood": that is, Hollywood as a locked place.

Kathy Selden (Debbie Reynolds): -And there was a girl. Lina Lamont. I don't go to the movies much. If you've seen one, you've seen them all.

We could see as a scurrilous allusion to a tyrannical mother in the figure of Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen), a forced "fiancée" of matinée idol Don Lockwood (who pretends to be socialising with her around the party atmosphere of Hollywood in the 20's).

Don Lockwood (exposing his true feelings to Lina): -There is nothing between us. There has never been anything between us. Just air.

In a classic Oedipal dream, for instance, the presence of the queen might be a 'disguise' for the mother. But the conditions of pictorial representability are equally applicable to both; it is no more difficult to represent the mother via a visual image than it is to represent the queen. Freud recognised that a dreamer in relation to his dream-wishes can only be compared to an amalgamation of two separate people who are linked by some important common element.

Kathy Selden (whose surname could be a substitute for "Seldom") is a young actress who, the same as Don, is exaggerating her "dignity" in order to gain sympathy in a ruthless industry. Although a romantic relationship is clearly established, however one can't shake off the impression of being contemplating a courtship a little too pure and restrained, almost as if we were witnessing siblings role-playing in a platonic romance. In "On the Universal Tendency to Debasement in the Sphere of Love," Freud discusses the "incestuous fixation on mother or sister", so Kathy's character could stand for Don's sister. In Freud's most famous work, "The Interpretation of Dreams", incest -in which the original object (for the male) is the mother or sister- forms the material for the most common theme in art and creative writing. Interestingly, Lina expresses a desire to kill her 'successor' Kathy ("I'll kill her"), who becomes a reminder of Lina's caducity.

In the non-dialogue segment of "Broadway Ballet" between Cyd Charisse (the vamp) and the young hoofer (Gene Kelly), a lubricious dance spirals into a veiled catachresis which isn't easy to decipher when the figure of a ganster appears winning back the indecorous vamp. In "A Special Type of Choice of Object Made by Men," Freud considers men who are interested only in women over whose affections they must compete with another man; women who by virtue of their sexual life have something of the prostitute about them and for that reason are more exciting. The lover of this type proposes to save the woman he desires, though he readily accepts the presence of his rival. Thenceforward he feels he must save her from degradation. This pattern, Freud adds, is repetitive, because it can only result in disappointment.

The staircase symbol: 'Ladders, steps and staircases, or, more precisely, walking on them, are clear symbols of sexual intercourse. On reflection, it will occur to us that the common element here is the rhythm of walking up them.' Symbolism is like a language, but one which, curiously, the dreamer has not learned. Knowledge of the language is unconscious, but this, according to Freud, is more problematic than unconscious 'endeavours' (wishes and impulses).

Despite the fact that Freud earlier referred to unconscious psychical conflict as leaving the patient 'in the peculiar state of knowing and at the same time not knowing', here, unconscious knowledge presents a problem. The very great majority of symbols in dreams are sexual symbols. What makes the symbolic relation 'a comparison of a quite special kind' is not just the obscurity in some cases, but the curious fact that the dreamer is not 'acquainted with' the symbol, uses it 'without knowing about it'; we are faced by the fact that the dreamer has a symbolic mode of expression at his disposal which he does not know in waking life and does not recognise. Thus symbolism is a second and independent factor in the distortion of dreams, alongside of the dream-censorship.

Freud identifies displacement as the most powerful instrument of the dream-censorship. We can guess how much to the point is Nietzsche's assertion that in dreams 'some primaeval relic of humanity is at work which we can now scarcely reach any longer by a direct path'; It was later found that linguistic usage, mythology and folklore afford the most ample analogies to dream symbols. The use of a common symbolism extends far beyond the use of a common language.

Audience: -lt's a Lockwood & Lamont talkie. This is terrible. The sound is out of synchronization!

The relationship between language and thought by Lakoff and Johnson: according to their proposed 'contemporary theory of metaphor', which rejects the classical treatment of metaphor as a strictly linguistic device, 'the locus of metaphor is not in language at all, but in the way we conceptualize one mental domain in terms of another'; thus metaphor, like (non-conventional) symbolism, is 'fundamentally conceptual, not linguistic in nature'.

CONCLUSION: As representational meaning, Lina Lamont would adopt the role of surrogate mother to estranged son Don (he calls Lina "rattlesnake" and "reptile" and whom he'd want "to break every bone in her body"), Kathy Selden would assume the figure of Don's sister (or even daughter, given the fatherly treatment in their fairy tale romance); probably the most interesting (although screen time-wise brief) female character is Cyd Charisse's: her dual character as femme fatale and bride would personify the flesh and blood girlfriend who abandoned Don to become a ganster's moll, which would lead us to conclude that the "Broadway Ballet" (intended to be a dream scene or a surrealistic proposal which will be discarded) is maybe the only real scenery all through the film, therefore Don Lockwood is basically a popular dancer from Broadway, a Hollywood actor in the making, but still not the superstar Don Lockwood appears to be in the beginning of the film. So the fantasy part in "Singin' in the Rain" would include all the story except the fourteen minutes of "Broadway Rhythm Ballet", hence its seemingly anarchic structure makes sense if we see the film as a paradigm of the musical genre that venerates happines above reality.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

"For Me & My Gal" (1942) - Full Movie, starring Judy Garland and Gene Kelly

Gene Kelly and Judy Garland as Harry Palmer and Jo Hayden in "For Me & My Gal" (1942)

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Gene Kelly ("All I Do Is Dream Of You") video


Gene Kelly ("All I Do Is Dream Of You") video featuring pictures of Gene Kelly and his co-stars Judy Garland ("For Me and My Gal", "Summer Stock", "The Pirate"), Frank Sinatra and Esther Williams ("Take Me Out to the Ballgame"), Cyd Charisse ("Singin in the Rain", "Brigadoon"), Rita Hayworth ("Cover Girl"), Vera-Ellen ("Words and Music"), Kathryn Grayson ("Thousand Cheers"), Lucille Ball ("DuBarry was a Lady"), Lana Turner and June Allyson ("The Three Musketers), Catherine Deneuve and Françoise Dorléac ("Les demoiselles de Rochefort"), "Tamara Toumanova ("Invitation to the Dance"), Pier Angeli ("The Devil Makes Three"), Deanna Durbin ("Christmas Holiday"), Marie McDonald ("Living in a Big Way"), Barbara Laage ("The Happy Road"), Fred Astaire, Julie Andrews, etc. Soundtrack: "Sunrise Serenade" by Glenn Miller, "Take'em or leave'em" by Amy Lavere, "All I Do Is Dream Of You" (sung by Gene Kelly) and "When You Wore a Tulip" (sung by Judy Garland and Gene Kelly).

 
Nina Foch (April 20, 1924 - December 5, 2008. Happy Anniversary!) is probably best remembered as Milo Roberts: the rich, manipulative socialite who tries to buy Gene Kelly’s character, as well as his artwork, in Vincente Minnelli ’s 1951 musical, "An American in Paris".

Friday, April 20, 2012

Jake Gyllenhaal Making U.S. Stage Debut for Roundabout Theatre Company

Jake Gyllenhaal out for a stroll with sister Maggie in New York City, on April 5, 2012

Jake Gyllenhaal will make his American stage debut in "If There Is I Haven't Found It Yet," the Roundabout Theatre Company said Thursday.

Jake Gyllenhaal at the 62nd Berlinale International Film Festival (February, 9, 2012)

The Oscar-nominated star of "Brokeback Mountain" and "Prince of Persia" will star in the story of a girl who is bullied at school and finds herself suspended after head-butting a tormentor. Gyllenhaal will play the girl's foul-mouthed uncle, who forms a bond with his struggling niece. The piece was written by up-and-coming British playwright Nick Payne, who also wrote the critically adored "Constellations."

Jake Gyllenhaal with Anna Paquin, Hayden Christensen and Kenneth Lonergan on the set of "This Is Our Youth" (staged at the Garrick Theatre in the West End, London, 2002)

The show will run Off-Broadway at Roundabout's Laura Pels Theatre. Performances will start August 24 and officially open on September 20. Gyllenhaal is best known for his film roles, but he's treaded the boards before. He made made his stage debut in 2001 starring in Kenneth Lonergan's revival of "This is Our Youth," on London's West End. For his work, he earned the Evening Standard Theater Award for Outstanding Newcomer. Source: www.thewrap.com

Thursday, April 19, 2012

“Entertainment and Utopia” in "Singin' in the Rain" (Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly)

Hollywood legend Debbie Reynolds is convinced "The Artist" borrowed heavily from her hit movie "Singin' In The Rain" but failed to live up to the 1952 film's high standards.

Debbie Reynolds, who starred alongside Gene Kelly and Donald O'Connor in the popular musical, has now spoken out about the similarities between the two pictures, insisting she enjoyed "The Artist" but felt it failed to shine in the same way as "Singin' In The Rain".

She tells the New York Post, "I thought The Artist was a very good film, with talented personalities. But while they took the basic premise of Singin' in the Rain, it's not in colour, and it doesn't have Gene Kelly and Donald O'Connor. And its musical numbers aren't as good..."

"When we made the picture, nobody had the slightest idea that it would someday be listed among the greatest films of all time. We just thought it was a big, splashy MGM musical." Unlike "The Artist", "Singin' In The Rain" failed to win a single Oscar, but it was named fifth in the American Film Institute's (AFI) list of the 100 greatest movies of all time. Source: www.imdb.com

"Singin' in the Rain" is a canonical self-reflexive film which combines an informed self-consciousness with an argument about its own legitimacy as art. The film's argument is structurally evident within one of the film's more famous self-reflexive sequences, "You Were Meant for Me," and it is intended as a preliminary move in an exploration of new academic genres in film theory that hypertext might allow. -from "Singin' in the Rain: A Hypertextual Reading" by Adrian Miles (1998)

-Kathy Selden (Debbie Reynolds): What do you have to be so conceited about? You're nothing but a shadow on film... just a shadow. You're not flesh and blood.
-Don Lockwood (Gene Kelly): Oh, no? [moves amorously towards her]
-Kathy: Stop!
-Don: What can I do to you?, I'm only a shadow.

Jack Purcell, author of “Plato’s Theory of Film,” writes: "Within modern cinema, it could be argued that, in its entirety the cinema is an illusion. The stages, the actors, the dialogue, the events, etc. are not what they seem to be. They represent nothing. Cinema is simply a space of fantasy, of complete illusion." The images cast on the screen by the film projector are mere shadows or illusions of what is real. True reality is not depicted; only one person’s vision of reality or of how reality could be or should be is presented. The viewing audience is led to believe – or at least asked to suspend disbelief – that what they are seeing is real. But alas, it is only a shadow on film. Andre Bazin writes in “The Ontology of Photographic Image” that through the creation of film comes “the creation of an ideal world in the likeness of the real, with its own temporal destiny”.

As Godard once said, “The moment the camera is turned on, the lie begins. But leave the camera on long enough and the truth will be revealed.” The images are mere illusions; some might even say a lie. But behind those illusions and lies is often some semblance of truth. The idea of exposing the “behind-the-scenes” truth was a central one to many early musicals, especially those of the early 1930s produced or directed by Busby Berkeley. These films make a story of the conflicts, drama, and struggles of putting on a Broadway show or musical review. These films were central not only to the development of the musical genre, but also to the development of talking pictures.

In the early 1950s, screenwriters Betty Comden and Adolph Green were hired by MGM to write a film that revolved around the old standards of Arthur Freed, and to name it after his classic “Singin’ in the Rain.” What came of their labor was the film that Roger Ebert has called "the greatest Hollywood musical of all time." The audience is aware from the start that the stories being spun are shams, and eventually the characters are made aware as well. The narrative illusions that the film exposes are Don Lockwood’s supposed rise to stardom as told to gossip columnist Dora Bailey, and Kathy Selden’s story to Don about being a stage actress. Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly’s "Singin’ in the Rain" (1952) can be examined on two levels: first as an entertaining film, and second as a work of art. The film holds a comfortable place high on countless “best films of all time” lists, and was named the greatest American movie musical of all time in 2005 (AFI.com).

Tim Dirks writes in "The Greatest Films of All Time": The narrative images on the screen belie every embellished, fabricated word – in reality the pictures and descriptions are terribly disjointed. ("Singin' in the Rain"’s theme is the “out-of-sync” disjunction of words / sounds / movie images from reality – what can be believed in the magical world of film? Can we believe our eyes and our ears?) Like critic Peter Wollen, Dirks highlights the fact that this film is about exposing the truth of Hollywood. It causes us to question what we see and hear, and to ask if those sights and sounds can be trusted. If film is an illusion, then what is the reality behind that illusion?

Marilyn M. Ewing’s “’Gotta Dance!’ Structure, Corruption, and Syphilis in Singin’ in the Rain” concentrates on the “Broadway Ballet” number. This highly stylized dance number seems to be an interruption in the story line, but adds another dimension to the satirical nature of the film. ‘The Broadway Ballet’ functions as a map to the film industry’s dark underbelly.” According to Ewing, Gene Kelly uses the “big dance number” – a generic standard – to make a statement about the darker side of Hollywood. In this beautifully choreographed number, he exposes the ugly truth about the corruption that played a very important role in the early days of the movie industry. The bright lights and colorful costumes and exuberant dancing are but mere illusions that hide a darker, more sinister reality. Kelly, like the freed prisoner, turns our heads to see the truth regarding this corruption.

Richard Dyer’s piece entitled “Entertainment and Utopia” points out the idealism of musicals. According to Dyer, musicals paint an emotional picture of cultural idealism. They do not give us a structure, political or otherwise, for utopia, but the feelings of it. In the world of musicals, utopia is nothing political, but rather a “glorious feeling”. Another article in George M. Cohan’s anthology, Jane Feuer’s “The Self-Reflective Musical and the Myth of Entertainment” discusses the “mythify[ing] of [the genre’s] own entertainment values”. In this essay, Feuer writes about the self-reflective nature of many musicals – referring specifically to Singin’ in the Rain – and how such films give “every appearance of commenting critically on their own formal status as musicals,” but really rely on the myths of “spontaneity, integration, and the audience” to satisfy their contradictory nature.

"Singin’ In the Rain" exposes the illusions and artifice of the filmmaking industry, as well as the deceptions of the leading characters. In this film, sight and sound are shown to not be reliable; honesty can be found only in dance. The first artifice exposed in "Singin’ in the Rain" is the visual image. The film takes place in the late 1920s when the visual image ruled the silver screen, the era of the silent film. Don Lockwood and Lina Lamont are performing a love scene during the filming of The Dueling Cavalier. Their melodramatic faces exude romance and passion, but Don is whispering anything but sweet nothings into Lina’s ear.

While a major storyline in this film is the dubbing of Kathy’s voice over Lina's (Jean Hagen), the film does not expose only the deception of sound on the silver screen. This exposure of illusion extends beyond of the film-within-the-film to the lives of the main characters. Upon meeting each of the two romantic leads, Don Lockwood and Kathy Selden, we quickly learn that neither is who they say they are. Don lies to impress the crowd outside Grauman’s Chinese Theater; Kathy lies to impress Don – or at least to deflate his ego.

We first meet Don at the premiere of The Royal Rascal, the latest offering from Hollywood’s “It” couple, Don Lockwood and Lina Lamont. Gossip columnist Dora Bailey asks Don to treat the crowd lining the red carpet with the story of his rise to fame. He begins by reciting his lifelong motto, “Dignity, always dignity.” Don tells of fine schools, apprenticeships, and touring symphonic concert halls, but we see him tap dancing for pennies as a child, being booed off the stage at amateur night, and touring the likes of Oat Meal, Nebraska and Coyoteville, New Mexico. His big break with Monumental Pictures came when a stunt man is knocked out cold on the set of a silent film. His rise to stardom is nothing like his story to Miss Bailey, and is anything but dignified. Instead of telling his adoring fans the truth, he lies to them because the truth is not very “dignified.”

While this introduction appears to be a big star lying to hide the indignity of his rise to fame, if this scene is contrasted with the “Broadway Ballet” number in the second half of the film we see that there is actually a hint of dignity in Lockwood’s background. Through tap, ballet, and modern dance, the “Broadway Ballet” tells the story of a young hoofer arriving in New York looking for his big break. After several auditions for talent agents, he finally lands a gig at a speakeasy. This leads to performing in vaudeville shows, in 'Ziegfeld’s Follies', and finally on Broadway.

However, all along the way he keeps crossing paths with a mobster and his moll. This, according critic Marilyn Ewing, points to the corruption and mob influence in Hollywood at that time. The hoofer has to sell himself to that system to get his foot in the door. All of his success is tainted by that first move, and that corruption follows him throughout his career.

Kathy (Debbie Reynolds) lies about her line of work, too. She isn’t an up-and-coming stage actress, but a dancing girl from the Coconut Grove. Her lofty claims of being a stage actress are exposed as a lie when she jumps out of the cake as part of the song-and-dance troupe at R.F. Simpson’s party. Like Don just a few moments earlier, Kathy’s lies, like Don’s before hers, cause us to question the truthfulness of what is heard. And if the veracity of sight and sound is in question, is there anything in this film that can be trusted? The answer, according to Peter Wollen, is dance. Through watching dance, we can know we are not being lied to. Honesty is best expressed by the characters in this film through dance.

Only dance can be trusted to express romantic intentions and the “glorious feelings” that accompany those intentions. After a brief separation, Don and Kathy are reunited on the Monumental Pictures back lot. Together again, Kathy confesses her earlier lies and Don confesses his feelings for her – or at least they attempt to do so. Both are at a loss for words when it comes to telling the truth. So Don takes her into an empty sound studio, “sets the stage” with “a rosetrellised bower, flooded with moonlight… [and] five hundred kilowatts of stardust.” The fairy-tale romance between Don and Kathy is but a shadow of real-life romance, or to use Plato’s words, a shadow of the “Form” of romance. The second illusion created and perpetuated by "Singin’ in the Rain" is that of the happy ending.

We are able to vicariously experience the feelings of being in love as we watch characters on the screen fall in love. We can get caught up in the emotions of a fairy-tale romance because it is not our own heart that will be broken if the relationship fails. The narrative structure of film is important to its escapist qualities. Conflict and the resolution of conflict is central to most narratives, and as Thomas Schatz writes, “If there is anything escapist about these narratives, it is their repeated assertion that these conflicts can be solved”. It is not only the escape out of life’s problems that encourages our belief in the illusions of film, but also the escape into something better.

Film critic Mark Bourne writes in his review of the 50th anniversary release of the DVD: “This 1952 romantic comedy transcended being simply the best of the MGM Technicolor musicals to become one of movie-making’s most pleasurable essential classics.” What makes this such a special film are the multiple layers upon which it can be enjoyed and appreciated. It is, at first glance, a great Hollywood musical. Just slightly below the surface, it is also a satire of the difficult transition that Hollywood experienced as its films learned to talk. Then on a much deeper level, this film asks us to consider questions about the nature of both film and reality.

"Singin’ In The Rain" is full of Hollywood inside jokes and references to infamous snafus committed on the back lots of many of the studios. While much of the comedy is derived from this satire, there is a more serious side to it as well. The film criticizes the intrusion of the government into the affairs and beliefs of those in the industry, as well as the influence the mob had gained over Hollywood. Some have read the “blacklisting” of Kathy Selden in the film (Lina’s harsh treatment of her, and everyone’s attempts to hide Kathy from Lina) as a reference to the 50's anti-communist crusade (according to Peter Wollen).

Marilyn Ewing writes about the entire “Broadway Ballet” being a satire of the corruption and mob influence in Hollywood. The young hoofer has to “sell out” in order to get his first job. Peter N. Chumo II asserts that the moll and her ‘very sexual dancing’ seem to transform the hoofer. She removes his glasses and hat, the ‘unglamorous’ parts of his wardrobe, and it is after meeting her that he ascends to success. The implication seems to be that she seduces the honest rube and turns him into a corrupted cynic, which is what allows him to thrive in the big-city world.

Yet as Ewing notes, the scene is far from extraneous but is actually thematically integral to the movie as a whole. This insistence that musical numbers serve the story is what elevates Gene Kelly’s movies – the ones over which he had some measure of creative control, anyway – over most other artists’ musicals. Character and theme are just as important as the plot, and it is those story elements that the Broadway ballet enhances. Far from having a ‘tenuous link’ to the rest of the picture, the ballet offers insights into Lockwood and underscores one of the film’s central themes. Ewing does an excellent job of highlighting one element of the theme developed by this sequence: the ‘hypocrisy of Hollywood.’

Where Ewing takes her analysis too far is in the specificity she sees in the hypocrisy presented in the ballet. She writes that the Broadway ballet ‘ostensibly celebrates the entertainment industry [and] seems at first glance to be a sincere testimonial to the joys of being a performer,’ but notes that to clearly consider the events of the sequence is to come to a far uglier conclusion; as the gangster and the moll both flip coins, and coins are dirty and resemble syphilitic lesions, the moll has syphilis, and so we can see her as having spread venereal disease to the hoofer. Ewing further notes that the moll (Cyd Charisse) is supposed to resemble Louise Brooks, who was, by her own admission, rumored to have syphilis.

Far below the entertaining surface of the film, and below even the comical and more serious sides of the satire, is the philosophical layer of this film. In Socrates words: "At first, when any of them is liberated and looks toward the light, he will suffer sharp pains; the glare will distress him, and he will be unable to see the realities of which in his former state he had seen the shadows… what he saw before was an illusion. This new experience of the reality of his existence is a painful one. The light is overwhelmingly bright, and the thought that all he had once known was an illusion is disturbing. But the more he gazes, and the more he questions, the clearer his vision and his understanding become." -“You’re Nothing but a Shadow on Film” - Plato’s "Allegory of the Cave" and "Singin’ in the Rain"- by Ryan Blanck (2007)