M. Night Shyamalan targets an ordinary audience. He wants to make a cross-generational movie for everyone from parents, children, grandchildren. Shyamalan uses his vision to transform a B-movie genre of alien invasion into an emotional tale of faith and belief. The film’s prevailing theme of the resilience of the human spirit led critics to interpret the film as almost a response to September 11th. By A. Long
tagged pfdoctype_newspapers_articles_&_reviews pffilmtitle_signs pfpeople_m._night_shyamalan by wellske ...and 1 other person ...on 27-MAR-07
M. Night Shyamalan further centers the film’s themes on lost faith and later redemption of the protagonist Graham Hess. He connects worship beyond just the characters, but into a more self-conscious worship of cinema, the motivation of audiences to repeatedly attend screenings in movie theatres. Whether in reverence or otherwise, the director cleverly uses silence as a device for plot and representation. By A. Long
tagged pfdoctype_newspapers_articles_&_reviews pffilmtitle_signs pfpeople_m._night_shyamalan by wellske ...and 1 other person ...on 27-MAR-07


