Couldn't be him because they left him there to go find cthulu gas mask drug dude in Walter White underoos.So is the lawn mower guy the gas mask guy? They looked identical but the lawn mower guy was sitting so I can't tell.
Couldn't be him because they left him there to go find cthulu gas mask drug dude in Walter White underoos.So is the lawn mower guy the gas mask guy? They looked identical but the lawn mower guy was sitting so I can't tell.
That's what i am also expecting, however the way they sometime "stop" a scene to have him go on like that, feels more like self serving and indulgent than character development driven.
Amazing show with amazing writing.
Matthew Mcconaughey's character is absolutely riveting. It's scary how much his thoughts echo mine. His view's on religion should be the norm.
Glad I'm not the only one! Seriously, I've said stuff that came out of his mouth and gotten the same reaction from people and then I have to wonder if I'm broken or something.
Couldn't be him because they left him there to go find cthulu gas mask drug dude in Walter White underoos.
Whether the writer of the show self-adheres to Rust's worldview will probably become apparent by the end, in which case I would I expect Rust's 'argument' to be vindicated or honored in some way, such as the guess I spoiler tagged above. I foresee the ending's 'message' to exalt those who refuse to avert their eyes from the abyss and admonish those who look away, without any sense of self-awareness that the latter group are also lying to themselves and that judgement of this kind is in of itself a source of meaning and life.
That would be sad as the writer isn't known for being so blatantly amateurish to have to doggedly stick to something he believes at the risk of ruination of a story just to fit his personal thoughts. Man that would fucking BLOW![]()
these monologues and the show itself seems very forced to make us believe that we have complex characters and smart writing, I just see a lot of characters that until now are one dimensional and at this point they still don't star to develop any layer of personality... let's wait to see if the show becomes better.
I couldn't really stomach your post in general, but this is where I became nauseatedI don't know anything about his work history so my post is pretty judgmental for being so uninformed. But Rust's lines seem to be regularly crossing the line from character to personal sermon, which is usually a sign of the writer's beliefs leaking in. I don't mean to imply that Rust's character is written 'wrong', just that the ethos of Rust seems to be threatening to swallow the actual character of Rust. Rust is so over the top that its making the show seem too absolutist (or perhaps that's the point). Regardless, I can't help but assume we're in a vindication versus redemption situation, where Rust loses the battle but wins the war so to speak, or is slowly convinced to reevaluate life in a more positive light.
I realize that's a rather trite evaluation coming from someone with little experience in this realm, and I expect, and hope, to be completely wrong. Hopefully the show is pulling a meta-feint and purposefully setting it up so people like myself find themselves predisposed towards certain conclusions, when in fact the truth is much more clever. It's just that pseudo-nihilism and its smug sense of superiority and contempt for the 'unenlightened' has just been so popularized in media nowadays, particularly by the Coen brothers, that its hard to believe a show so seemingly draped in its trappings is going to subvert it. That said, that link posted above did include a snippet where a producer mentioned the show still having a sense of optimism despite all the darkness, so we'll see.
I bet there is a direct correlation between the amount someone is offended by what Rust has to say and to how smug they find him. He touches a nerve and I think its great. Marty is usually there to counter balance Rust's arguments, I'm not really sure how anyone could see it as one sided.
I find this interesting because I see Rust's worldview as growing increasingly contradictory. As Hart says, "For someone who thinks existence is meaningless you sure spend a lot of time thinking about it". If you subscribe to Rust's belief that consciousness and identity are an illusion and that we are merely biological meat-puppets who accidentally evolved to think we are 'aware', then why do you have a problem with religion or religious thinking?
They need to just go wholehog-abstraction and have the show drift away into these passages with equally poetic imagery. Framing as a conversation between the two is just awful.
I realize that's a rather trite evaluation coming from someone with little experience in this realm, and I expect, and hope, to be completely wrong. Hopefully the show is pulling a meta-feint and purposefully setting it up so people like myself find themselves predisposed towards certain conclusions, when in fact the truth is much more clever. It's just that pseudo-nihilism and its smug sense of superiority and contempt for the 'unenlightened' has just been so popularized in media nowadays, particularly by the Coen brothers, that its hard to believe a show so seemingly draped in its trappings is going to subvert it. That said, that link posted above did include a snippet where a producer mentioned the show still having a sense of optimism despite all the darkness, so we'll see.
However, maybe that is completely intentional and perhaps they are going somewhere with it.
I couldn't really stomach your post in general, but this is where I became nauseated![]()
I bet there is a direct correlation between the amount someone is offended by what Rust has to say and to how smug they find him. He touches a nerve and I think its great. Marty is usually there to counter balance Rust's arguments, I'm not really sure how anyone could see it as one sided.
Because it's a waste of time? Look, we are just living in the dream of being people. There was no before, there is no after. Life itself may or may not be a mistake, but the level of awareness humans have gained through evolution is tragic. It makes us aware enough to be in awe of the universe and desperate to find meaning in all of it when there is none. We are only here a short time and the more we waste it on fantasy the worse off all of us are.
I assume you mean my last post? I didn't think anything in the one you quoted was that offensive. If so, I think you're confusing my discussion of nihilists like Rust as an attack of atheism. If you think I'm insulting the latter that's projection on your part. But for those like Rust who identify as nihilists and biological determinists and still focus a large part of their identity in anti-religious thought, yeah, I do find that inherently contradictory and worthy of scorn.
Also, I'm not sure where the untouchable reverence for the Coen brothers comes from, but if you found my quip nauseating I'd recommend exposing yourself to critics who have a more negative impression of their work. It's hard for me to see my comment as a slight and not more of a statement of fact. One merely needs to rewatch A Serious Man and Fargo to realize how one dimensional their filmography has become of late.
Okay this shit is exactly the problem I have with Rust's character. So you don't believe in meaning but yet you believe time can be wasted (I'll ignore the issue of time being an illusion of consciousness). So you must believe certain actions or behaviors are inherently worth more than others, else how could one waste a finite amount of time if all actions are equally worthless. That requires a belief in some kind of value scheme. And to believe that certain values should be pursued over others is to ascribe meaning to life.
I think you should try to reflect on the cognitive dissonance you are displaying and why it is you find certain beliefs so abominable despite saying everything is meaningless. Are the remote tribes of the Amazon wasting their time because they believe in spirits or other forms of mysticism? What makes your lifestyle superior to theirs? And if we are just meat puppets, there is no free will and no one chooses to believe or act at all. How could someone waste time in the abstract because of beliefs they have no control over, how can you ascribe fault to automatons without agency?
I don't get the impression that the writer of the show is trying to get people to identify or subscribe to Rust's line of thinking. It makes good television and makes sense for the character to feel the way he does based on his history and things that have shaped him. If you identify with that world view, that's fine, but I don't think this show or the writer is aiming to do that at all.
Definitely not. I agree we're supposed to be seeing how disillusioned he is with life, I just think there's a ring of truth behind it all.
Of course, I have no qualms admitting his world view is not healthy.
I definitely wasn't trying to say that you don't have a right to feel that sorta way. I don't know the stuff you've been through. I would just say that a worldview both in television characters (and in real life), can change very quickly.
I don't get the impression that the writer of the show is trying to get people to identify or subscribe to Rust's line of thinking. It makes good television and makes sense for the character to feel the way he does based on his history and things that have shaped him. If you identify with that world view, that's fine, but I don't think this show or the writer is aiming to do that at all.
You realize Fargo was one of their very first films, made in the 90s rightt? And A Serious Man was 2009. I'm butting in on your argument with other posters here but if you can't appreciate commentary on how confused the human experience can be then that's totally ok
How about this, people are wasting time in church when they could be out actually helping people. Everyone is so worried about THEMSELVES and their OWN SALVATION that it's ruining the potential of our species as a whole. I don't have such illusions or quandrums about life and use my time accordingly. I volunteer at a food shelter, I work at an animal rescue facility in the summer. I'm not a saint, I'm a stoner and slacker, but my point is, when humanity eventually gets over the fantasy of the afterlife and seeks to improve shit down here, down where it matters to the weak and oppressed who don't deserve to live a short life of misery while others live in a drawn out illusion of selfishness, we'll all be better off.
And it bothers me because it's not real, and we should be better than this. We have the power of intelligence and waste it.
I realize I've derailed this thread enough and will stop.
This discussion has been fine so far. As long as it is related to the show, doesn't get personal, and isn't just a few people dominating conversation by repeating the same points, I don't see a problem with it. At the same time, if people feel they've said their piece and want to move on, of course that's ok, too.How is talking about the show's very themes derailing? I guess Cornballer can shed light on that, but i don't think these threads are only meant to be reaction posts and gifs and circle-jerking.
How is talking about the show's very themes derailing? I guess Cornballer can shed light on that, but i don't think these threads are only meant to be reaction posts and gifs and circle-jerking.
Anyway i just wanted to clarify, i'm not irked nor disturbed by Rust's personality, i'm annoyed by (some of) the writing that i find heavy handed and redundant.
I think the Religion monologue is a good example of this, it goes on too long when it is painfully clear what Rust's vision on the subject is, given that they've been reinforcing his character for 2 episodes before that.
And yet the scene goes on (relatively) forever, to the point where it sounds like a teenager writing about the "lie we live", more than simple character development.
And no, i'm not religious and really never have been (my family isn't even Christian) so i don't find that moment in any way irksome on a personal level, just indulgent to the point of triteness.
It came off to me as something searching desperately for cleverness or deepness, at the cost of subtlety, ending up with neither.
That reminds me of Hart's a smart guy who's steady is hard to find quote in Episode 1. Neither of them has the ability to do this on their own, but it seems like putting them together resulted in its own set of problems eventually.It's not really discussion about those polarities, both men are fundamentally flawed individuals, they're really two sides of the same coin, so it's really just an exploration of that.
I'm religious, and I didn't find it remotely offensive. It's not really discussion about those polarities, both men are fundamentally flawed individuals, they're really two sides of the same coin, so it's really just an exploration of that.
Idk, that's just me though.
I think juxtaposing the monologues with "poetic" imagery would feel even more try-hard. What kind of imagery, specifically, would you like to see?
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reading between the many lines. Offended seems very apt, but you at least take issue with his dialogue. You've said you don't like the fact the detectives in 2012 are giving Rust a soapbox to ramble on about his philosophy (or lack therefore). If you didnt have an issue with the content of what he has to say, I'm not sure why it would matter. Its giving insight into how the character thinks, sometimes directly and other times indirectly.I'm not sure where you got the sense I was offended by what Rust said.
to say something like that. You appear to have very set definitions and boxes which you're attempting to fit Rust's character into, he doesn't fit within those definitions, and is therefore fake. And therefore the dialogue is grating. And therefore its wasted time with no purpose to the show.its clear you're just anti religous and not a nihilist, which is totally fine (though you may mistakenly identify as one)
yes. Its right there in their discussions. The one where they were eating lunch gets right down to the nuts and bolts of itIt's not really discussion about those polarities, both men are fundamentally flawed individuals, they're really two sides of the same coin, so it's really just an exploration of that.
reading between the many lines. Offended seems very apt, but you at least take issue with his dialogue. You've said you don't like the fact the detectives in 2012 are giving Rust a soapbox to ramble on about his philosophy (or lack therefore). If you didn't have an issue with the content of what he has to say, I'm not sure why it would matter. Its giving insight into how the character thinks, sometimes directly and other times indirectly.
Would it be better if he was a "real" nihilist as opposed to a pseudo-nihilist, as you've said? At what point are you just arguing semantics? You must think yourself an expert...to say something like that. You appear to have very set definitions and boxes which you're attempting to fit Rust's character into, he doesn't fit within those definitions, and is therefore fake. And therefore the dialogue is grating. And therefore its wasted time with no purpose to the show.
That said my mention of smug was originally a perjorative directed at pseudonihilistic media in the abstract, not Rust's character.
don't have a problem with Rust's character in of itself, but with the way the show is using him. I find the show to be aware of Rust's flawed and contradictory nature (though not to the degree I would like or on the same level as Hart) but sometimes they seem to be more interested in using Rust as a existential mouthpiece rather than a character.
Anyway i just wanted to clarify, i'm not irked nor disturbed by Rust's personality, i'm annoyed by (some of) the writing that i find heavy handed and redundant.
ok, but Rust's "mumbling" is in fact a small fraction of the show. We disagree that it is currently excessive. The specific words used aren't the issue, obviously. Were sitting here discussing nihilism when that word has never been used once within the show. How we are interpreting those words is where we differ. I think you take issue with what Rust is preach despite your claims to the contrary.The entire duration of the show could be Rust mumbling on and on but I think you'd agree that wouldn't be good even if we don't take issue with any of the specific words he's using?
I think you're taking the definition of certain words to the literal extreme. Rust isnt a robot and people don't shape their lives by how words are defined. His experiences shaped who is he and the single biggest events in his life were the death of his daughter, breakup of his marriage and his time undercover. Is he contradictory at times based on textbook definitions of what you think a nihilist is? sure. Does that make his dailogue mumbling or nonsense? Of course not. People have multiple layers and emotions come into play; they may end up not being consistent on all subjectsHad Rust not so clearly rejected any notion of free will in lieu of biological determinism, I would have accepted his religious soliloquy much easier.
For all we know, Rust may have been religious before his daughter's death and that is why he appears so bitter on the subject
Surprised at the dislike for Rust's character. I read it as a man scraped raw by the tragedy of his daughter. Rejecting belief of everything allows him to deny the tragedy itself.
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