It's official. I am a bad blogger when I'm not required to post something about once a week for a class. At the end of the day, I'm just not thinking about slapping words together in some body of text because I feel like all I'm doing these days is writing anyway. It's good because writing alot helps you improve your creative skills and usage, but it still burns you out and sucks all the words out of your brain by about 3 p.m. each day.
Today I just really want to comment on a couple of particularly interesting movies I have seen recently. I have always made it clear that my favorite movie is Memoirs of a Geisha, closely followed by Life is Beautiful. One of these two films I'm about to discuss challenges my top picks for their status, and you get to guess which one!
The first is a movie my roommate, Kayla told me about. Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of the film , titled The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, is that it is portrayed through the eyes of an eight-year-old boy named Bruno. It is amazing how completely his innocence breathes simplicity and clarity to the story and the issues involved, despite the horrific things he literally comes face-to-face with.

Bruno's father is a German Commandant at a concentration camp during World War II. His family is basically oblivious to the hideous, infamous acts and operations their father is commanding in the camp only miles from their new country home. I believe one of the most potent themes of the movie becomes prevalent when Bruno, hungry for adventure, sneaks away during the day, discovers the camp itself, and makes friends with an eight-year-old Jewish boy wearing a striped jumpsuit sitting slumped, tired and jaded on the other side of the fence. He has absolutely no reservations about befriending the young prisoner, something so basic to the forces of humanity yet so foreign to German society at the time. It is profound to also realize that through the entire course of the story, Bruno never truly understands what is going on behind those barbed wire fences. His heart is pure and true, untainted by ideas propagated at the time, just the way Heavenly Father placed it in his tiny little soul.
The beautiful kinship which develops between the two boys is tested and re-tested by fear, intimidation, and social stigma. Thoroughly shocking, the ending perhaps asks more questions than it answers. I couldn't stop thinking about it for... well, I'm still thinking about it aren't I?
The second movie, Penelope is probably one of the most pleasant, artistic, charming movies I have seen yet. I noticed on the cover of the DVD that it received an award for being a "truly moving picture," a well-deserved recognition, in my opinion.
Penelope is a girl who was born into blue-blood society with a pig snout nose. In an effort to reverse the alleged curse which bestowed her the abnormal nose, Penelope must marry a fellow blue-blood who accepts her as she is... or so her mother thinks as she centers Penelope's entire young adult exsistence on the courting of young men who each ultimately run with fright upon sight of her.
In my opinion, she is actually a rather pretty girl despite the snout and her tender yet clever countenance make her even charming. The overall message Penelope teaches viewers is one about physical appearance. However, after one young man sticks around a bit longer than usual, makes return visits to Penelope and develops sincere feelings for her behind closed doors, literally, he inspires her to break free of her home's confines and enter the world with courage and curiosity.
Penelope's acceptance of herself is the most inspiring facet of the film. It teaches us that being happy with who you are can get you much further now than accomodating your skills to a pre-determined success-type.
Well, I'm sure you have figured it all out already.... drumroll...
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Really, I just loved both movies. I saw some similarities between both, actually, what with the constraints both had on their lives.