solicitr wrote:To associate Werner Herzog, of all people, with "self-centered whining arrogance" does not reflect well on any who could form or hold such an opinion.
Why?

(Seriously, enlighten me: I've never watched any of his films. I would like to see
Grizzly Man but never got round to it.)
He sounds rather self-important in that article, but then a lot of artists do.
I also notice that in that article Herzog describes the Spanish Inquisition as a 'catastrophe'. Good man. No doubt he would have the same opinion of the Crusades.
I think that comparing modern psychology to the Spanish Inquisition is taking things a bit far though.

Although he might have a point.
Herzog's enemies- then it fits.
Herzog's enemies, according to that article, would also seem to include the Catholic forces who suppressed the Muslim element in Spain and those who are against gay rights.
I'm just ... saying. (I know nothing about the man and his personal beliefs, religious or otherwise.)
solicitr wrote:Methinks the privilege of taking this piece of 'entertainment' and its heavyhanded message seriously apparently depends on which side one's bread is buttered.
Personally, I don't know anyone who takes
Avatar seriously.
The story is unoriginal but well executed, at least visually.
Of course I knew the big bad colonel would die.

That character had it practically stamped across his forehead.

"Frodo undertook his quest out of love - to save the world he knew from disaster at his own expense, if he could ... "
Letter no. 246, The Collected Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien
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