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6 Great Movies That Will Overwhelm Your Senses

Movies are more than simply storytelling. It’s often tempting to focus exclusively on the story aspect of cinematic storytelling at the expense of the telling. It’s true that popular feature length movies are almost uniformly concerned with the unfolding of a narrative, but part of the pleasure of watching often comes from the familiarity or strangeness of a world we’re being immersed in. Sometimes this is done in beautiful, artful, and understated ways, and that’s great. What’s unfortunate is when equally beautiful and artful work is dismissed as spectacle or shallow entertainment, because the best of this kind of filmmaking exposes us to a way of seeing and experiencing cinema that’s different and interesting.

4) Moulin Rouge

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Moulin Rouge

Baz Luhrmann often gets characterized as a director interested solely making movies with spectacle rather than substance (as though spectacle does not, itself, contain substance). I find this unfair; the quality I appreciate most about his best films are their ability to combine his signature razzle-dazzle with subtler details and themes that are reinforced by his love of capturing excess. This made him the perfect person, in retrospect, to direct The Great Gatsby.

In terms of Luhrmann’s craziest cinematic combination of visuals and music, though, Moulin Rouge stands alone. There’s too much going on in this movie’s big scenes to even keep track of it all, although the frantic cutting gives us a chance to at least catch a glimpse of as much of the madness as possible. As someone who is easily overwhelmed by the sensory stimulation of wild party scenes in real life, the feeling of not knowing where to look is recreated nicely by the frenetic editing of these sequences. Not only is the frame always active, but the music is often accompanying it—even upstaging it—with bold moves like mashing Nirvana together with “Lady Marmalade.” The over-the-top direction of the entire story aligns with the over-the-top emotions of the romance, getting at the nature of romance itself.