Worth Fighting For
To me Se7en, is the closest thing I have seen to a perfect film.
But this post is not about that. It's about the final line in the film.
"Ernest Hemingway once wrote: "the world is a fine place and worth fighting for." I agree with the second part".
I feel a little funny, quoting a quote which is about a quote, but I'm sure we can deal with that.
I wonder about this quote. I wonder about it's meaning. Its clever, and plays with my mind.
But I also wonder, why the film Se7en ends with this. What is it saying about our world?
What does it mean? That the world is not a fine place, but still it's worth fighting for?
Therefore, it is a bad place, and its worth fighting for?
Is it a dark grey place full of complex frailties, hopes, fears and dreams? Is the world actually a complicated and convoluted mess that is only perceived by the imaginations of the people experiencing it such as the simple contrast of the optimist and the pessimist? Is the world really just a reflection of yourself and thus always worth fighting for?
Or is the quote wrong?
Is the world a fine place, and worth fighting for? Is the world not a fine place and not worth fighting for?
I wonder, after events like Yesterday's massacre in Virginia, if we can ever say 'the world is a fine place'.
I don't have answers to the questions the quote raises.
But I do know, that Heaven is a fine place, and one well worth fighting (spiritually) for.
We need to fight our own spiritual fights, as well as encourage other people to know about the fine place that is Heaven.
Jim
But this post is not about that. It's about the final line in the film.
"Ernest Hemingway once wrote: "the world is a fine place and worth fighting for." I agree with the second part".
I feel a little funny, quoting a quote which is about a quote, but I'm sure we can deal with that.
I wonder about this quote. I wonder about it's meaning. Its clever, and plays with my mind.
But I also wonder, why the film Se7en ends with this. What is it saying about our world?
What does it mean? That the world is not a fine place, but still it's worth fighting for?
Therefore, it is a bad place, and its worth fighting for?
Is it a dark grey place full of complex frailties, hopes, fears and dreams? Is the world actually a complicated and convoluted mess that is only perceived by the imaginations of the people experiencing it such as the simple contrast of the optimist and the pessimist? Is the world really just a reflection of yourself and thus always worth fighting for?
Or is the quote wrong?
Is the world a fine place, and worth fighting for? Is the world not a fine place and not worth fighting for?
I wonder, after events like Yesterday's massacre in Virginia, if we can ever say 'the world is a fine place'.
I don't have answers to the questions the quote raises.
But I do know, that Heaven is a fine place, and one well worth fighting (spiritually) for.
We need to fight our own spiritual fights, as well as encourage other people to know about the fine place that is Heaven.
Jim