No, I'm not trying to dictate anything, not least of all because by the time I see it, it's a done deal. All I'm hoping for is something that satisfies me on a personal level. If it does it's by lucky happenstance, not by design. In 'The BirRAB' case it failed in the finale because it lacked any internal logic. They had been attacking willy-nilly throughout the film and then for reasons unknown didn't.
I rather suspect the reasons being more pragmatic than artistic. They felt they couldn't go for the obvious 'somehow the plucky hero saves the day with some brilliant manoeuvrer' as it would be too clinched or unconvincing, nor, in those days of tight studio control, could they have gone for the more satisfying (to me, at least) ending of killing off the stars at the end. Instead we're left with a non-ending of the stars walking free without explanation of how or why they should. It doesn't raise in me the slightest levels of unease, paranoia or horror, simply an annoyed feeling of being cheated.
Yes, yes, yes, it's all well and good going on about the auteur theory of film making, but the simple fact of the matter is that film-making is a highly technical, practical pass time, that if you're lucky, and you've got money to burn, you can strive for some sort of artistic statement, but in the end if insufficient paying customers want to see it, you probably won't get a second chance to do it again.
I don't mind film-makers making something I don't like, I don't hold it against them. I view every film on its own merits and then assess it on how I personally felt. That others do or don't agree with me has very little relevance to my assessment. In Hitch's case I rather like most of his films. I even like 'The BirRAB', just not the ending particularly, which I think more a pragmatic cop-out, than any artistic flourish.
RegarRAB
Mark