[quote=mark f;647800]rufnek, I think you're being way too literal. We don't rewatch movies to see what our eyes may have missed. We rewatch them to see what our hearts and minds may have missed. We aren't especially rewatching the films to clarify the plot. We're rewatching them to try to figure out what it really means. What is the deeper meaning and how does it affect us in some non-superficial way. It could just be the way certain characters interract and how their relationship seems more (or less) meaningful than it originally did. I like to be able to understand what a film's plot is but if there are more-symbolic things occurring in the film and you only look at it from the point of view of just trying to understand "what's going on", you can easily miss many images which have significance far beyond the plot./quote]
Ah, Mark! I was just waiting for you to explain it all to me. "We rewatch them to see what our hearts and minds may have missed." Now that's beautiful, damn near poetic. Of course, me being me, I gotta wonder what your heart and mind were doing in the first showing that distracted their attention.

Sorry, just messing with you--you'd probably be disappointed if I didn't pull your chain just once.
Now symbolism I can understand. We used to have some great arguments about that in our college English lit class about a million years ago. I remember one scene from the book Crime and Punishment where one of the protagonists is standing under a small tree planted by the street in this city. It has just rained. I think the man is wearing a raincoat or some protective garment (this was decades ago, so forgive me if my memory is rusty). Anyway, drops of rainwater are dripping from the leaves of the tree onto the man's coat. The man stands there looking into the setting sun. There's another man across the street--some military guard, I think, maybe a policeman. And the man under the tree tells him, "I'm going to America." Then the man pulls out a pistol and shoots himself.
The scene is just dripping with symbolism, of course: standing under a tree by the city street, the dripping rainwater, the coat that encloses the man and seals him off from the life-giving water, the setting sun, the authority figure, the man about to set out on a journey west--not to the promised land of America, of course, but certainly a place far away where he will remain permanently.
But what if the reader doesn't know anything about symbolism in literature? He reads the short passage and learns the man kills himself. Does the symbolism tell us any more than that? Does the reader still get the essence of the passage even though he doesn't recognize the symbolism? Or is all the symbolism sort of a belt and suspenders approach to relaying the simple fact that the guy shoots himself?
As you can see, I have mixed thoughts on symbolism, but as you say
some directors and
some viewers enjoy the hunt for symbols. However, while some books like Crime and Punishment and The Scarlett Letter are chocked full of symbolism, would you expect to find it in a Mickey Spillane paperback? (Sorry, I don't know who might be the modern equivalent of Spillane.) I would assume the symbolism would be kinda thin in films like
Transformers and
Meet the Fokkers. So I guess a lot of films--maybe even the majority?--aren't worth a second viewing, at least not to uncover any deeper meaning or symbolism.
By the way, how many Ingmar Bergman, Alain Resnais and Andrei Tarkovsky films have you watched?

Oh, Mark, I love your blithe assumption that I'm just some clod who fell off the turnip wagon and into your blueberry patch! I hope you don't make such snap judgments of your other students. I had some teachers like that back when I was in public schools--probably why I turned out this way.
Anyhow, counting the number of films you've seen is nearly as crass as counting the number of women you've loved. I will say I liked Bergman's
The Seventh Seal the very first time I saw it. And it was still good at my most recent viewing. Of course, it's not something one would want to tackle everyday, but it's a hell of a story even if one doesn't know a damn thing about symbolism. And
Wild Strawberries probably has more meaning to me at my age than to you at yours, yet I'm sure we both enjoy it in our own simple ways.
I'm not familar with Resnais' name although I think I've heard of Tarkovsky, but then I may be confusing him with someone else. Anyway, I can't say for sure whether or not I've seen any of their films--maybe I have. Or maybe not.
I think our main difference, Mark, is that you're an aficionado of the cinema while I sometimes enjoy a good pictureshow. But what the hell difference does it make if we both enjoy what we're seeing?