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The scene where Ferris, Frye, & Sloane go to the museum, which is the best scene in the entire movie. No one talks about it, every one remembers Ferris singing but that is the best scene.

Anyway, Cameron is looking at George Seurat's painting, "Sunday Afternoon at the Grande Jatte". They keep getting a single shot closer on the painting and on Cameron -

My question is to all the would be screen analysts - What is trying to be portrayed in this scene?

2006-10-26 13:58:40 · 3 answers · asked by Winter_Decay 3 in Entertainment & Music Movies

3 answers

the closer you look at the painting, the more detail the painting is. the painting is made up of many different color dots. the further you get from the painting, the less detail you see. just like with life, the closer you get to someone, the more you can see about the person, and what makes that person that person.

p.s. Ferris Bueller, you're my hero

2006-10-26 14:45:49 · answer #1 · answered by Smith Jerrod 4 · 2 0

As a non screen analyst i believe it is demonstrating the way that art gets into your mind and your mind gets into the art. You can be so transfixed by it and you look deeper than just the wide view.

That is my 2 cents worth for today. So don't spend it all at once

2006-10-26 21:05:52 · answer #2 · answered by b2thebanana 2 · 0 0

The boredom of teen life, or clever filming side effect.

2006-10-26 21:06:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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