----------------------------Original message---------------------------- <<This is just the re-emergence of the old art vs. entertainment argument in jazzy deconstructionist clothes. I don't buy it. Don't buy what? You'll have to expand on that point (if you want to) cause I'm not sure exactly what you're saying. That the art vs. entertainment debate isn't valid at all? That you already know the answer to it? I'd appreciate if you could elucidate.>> Obviously you have a right to your views and I have a right to mine. However, when you choose to put your views in a public forum, why are you so shocked to have them challenged? I did not intend this to be a personal attack on you (I don't KNOW you.) To me, the implication that the attitude of Tarantino and Letterman et al is superior to attitudes that have preceded it, is not a defensible stance. What you appear to be saying is that, since that attitude (which is a denial of meaning-a reduction of all things to the level of a joke) is appealing to you it is somehow aesthetically superior to what has come before. What you seem to be saying is that any differing attitude is a sentimental, less true approach to life and art. It is that advancing of your own world view as inherently superior to what has come before that bothers me. Yes, the unpredictability, the meaninglessness of life, as you say, is a valid view. I often see it myself in life and art. However, to denigrate any other view, on the supposition that it has some "morality" (which seems to be a dirty word for you) instead of the "cool" amorality you enjoy, is simply too narrow a view for me. To me, the joy of being alive is in contemplating the wonderful variety of attitudes and views of the world which a medium like film can provide. Your view, as I interpret it, is a narrowing of options, an unwillingnes to have your world view challenged. Has it ever occured to you that there was some intellectual life before Tarantino and Letterman and that it might have something to teach you? I get the feeling that you don't have a rich background in the history of movies -- that you are letting preconceptions, rather than actual experience, dictate your position. Of course, I could be wrong about this. Neither of us here is creating holy writ. It's just an exchange of views, which might teach us all some things we hadn't considered before. Gene Stavis, School of Visual Arts - NYC