Loris Z.com

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Steven Shaviro on “Zodiac”

20 September, 2007 (18:31) | Research | By: Loris Z.

Professor Steven Shaviro writes about David Fincher’s film. I agree with many of his points. The only thing is, I thought the movie could have been a good 30 minutes shorter. Recommended, none the less.

A little excerpt:

Despite what I might have expected from the director of Seven, Zodiac is not interested at all in the inner motivations of the serial killer, nor even in the spectacle of gore that his acts created. Even the murders we see on-screen are oblique and deadpan; we have little sympathy for the victims, but also no sense of identification or complicity with the masked killer — the Zodiac killer is no Michael Myers. The movie has no shock effects, and no unplumbed depths. What you see is what you get, without any residue of mystery or suggestiveness or (even) danger. This is a world that is cooly and carefully visualized, and that doesn’t seem to have anything lurking in the shadows, anything beyond the literal givenness of what is visualized. This makes Zodiac almost the exact polar opposite of, say, Dario Argento’s films, with their baroque flourishes and arcane visual conceptions.

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