I just came back to this thread, and I am now thinking about how good a question this is. Oftentimes we credits movies as being "smart", and we mean that they present a storyline with power, with true artistry, one that illuminates or shows off Truth, or some other such lofty thing, but it's not always apparent how and why.
Why, for instance, is The Conversation smarter than Enemy of the State? I think most film critics would agree that that's true, but why? They both deal with paranoia, surveillance, and star Gene Hackman (arguably playing the same character), but one is "smarter" than the other. Why? It's slower-paced?
The difficulty here is coming from the fact that one feels truer, feels more "correct", and "feels" is the problem here, because it's a vague thing and it's experience or viewpoint-based. It's subjective.
Yet, in no universe is Enemy of the State smarter than The Conversation. Is it?
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