It kind of went like this:
Ferensviel: This looks great!
IL: I don't think you can say that.
*people say why, and that to them it looks better than conventional modern anime artwork*
IL: Now you're insulting conventional art!
Not trying to get at you Lemon, but we're just reacting to the catalysts we're being given here. I said I didn't 'like' the movie but highbrow or otherwise it's a simple fact that it's unique, daring and really elaborately drawn. I can easily understand why someone might run a mile from the pure 70s aesthetic distilled down into a film full of sex, violence, misery and dramatic music - it's never going to be a mainstream must-see film and isn't trying to be - but at the same time moaning that anyone that likes it is just being pretentious isn't going to go well. I seem to recall a similar discussion with another user a while back where I felt it was unfair that prejudices about a show's fans get in the way of a viewer's opinions on the show itself.
I openly like trashy conventional things (Miracle Train must be licensed one day and I recently said that SukaSuka was one of my picks of the season... despite it being a parade of doe-eyed school-aged girls with a generic-looking male lead). At the same time I acknowledge that Belladonna of Sadness is an interesting, important piece of cinema that deserves praise for managing to offer such a unique art style even for its time; if you're paranoid that its fans have latched onto it to pretend to like it in order to lord over other fans then you have to accept that's your delusion because it is possible to simply enjoy the movie without that kind of agenda.
I think the art style is amazing. Not because I'm pretentious or highbrow or blind, but because it shows the ugly beauty of highly sexualised adult women without infantilising people, and in a world filled with gritty teal/orange-tinted action films Belladonna throws colour around like it's going out of fashion. It doesn't really seem worth knocking it just for the sake of knocking it.
R