What do you think the main turnoff is for most people have toward "arthouse" movies?
I personally am a fan of arthouse movies
but I understand that most people aren't and I want to understand everyone's take on it.
Do you think it's because most people feel detached and unrelated to the characters and atmosphere? Because I've been to a few arthouse movies that have had FANTASTIC cinematography (Most good arthouse films are known for their cinematography and symbolism in the setup) and people still walked out saying the movie was boring while I was sitting there studying the characters, studying each frame for symbolism, and studying the environments to give me extra clues on hidden plot pieces in the story.
A few arthouse movies I can name from the top of my head that you probably know of are:
Stanley Kubrick's "Barry Lyndon"
Nicolas Winding Refn's "Drive"
Nicolas Winding Refn's "Only God Forgives"
Sofia Coppola's "The Bling Ring"
Now I really loved all of these movies but in Drive, after the first 15 minutes of the intense heist opening scene, like 2 people fell asleep in the theater
as soon as the ambient music started appearing and the awkward dialogue started emerging between the characters. I, for one, thought the awkward dialogue, ambient soundtrack, and practically everything in this film was brilliant but most people left the theater going "Okay that was boring" so I'm just curious what your opinions are of arthouse films 
PS: And generally the arthouse films are the ones that divide the critic community from most audiences. If you see a movie that has a viewer rating of a 4/10 by the audience and 9/10 by the critics, the film is most likely an arthouse movie. Most Audiences destroyed "The Bling Ring" while critics raved "The Bling Ring". And please don't mention Wes Anderson and Quentin Tarantino in this. They're good directors, but I wouldn't call their films the "Arthouse" type.
@baoliun yeah that spoof was great XD
I personally am a fan of arthouse movies

Do you think it's because most people feel detached and unrelated to the characters and atmosphere? Because I've been to a few arthouse movies that have had FANTASTIC cinematography (Most good arthouse films are known for their cinematography and symbolism in the setup) and people still walked out saying the movie was boring while I was sitting there studying the characters, studying each frame for symbolism, and studying the environments to give me extra clues on hidden plot pieces in the story.
A few arthouse movies I can name from the top of my head that you probably know of are:
Stanley Kubrick's "Barry Lyndon"
Nicolas Winding Refn's "Drive"
Nicolas Winding Refn's "Only God Forgives"
Sofia Coppola's "The Bling Ring"
Now I really loved all of these movies but in Drive, after the first 15 minutes of the intense heist opening scene, like 2 people fell asleep in the theater


PS: And generally the arthouse films are the ones that divide the critic community from most audiences. If you see a movie that has a viewer rating of a 4/10 by the audience and 9/10 by the critics, the film is most likely an arthouse movie. Most Audiences destroyed "The Bling Ring" while critics raved "The Bling Ring". And please don't mention Wes Anderson and Quentin Tarantino in this. They're good directors, but I wouldn't call their films the "Arthouse" type.
@baoliun yeah that spoof was great XD
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