spurspinter1
Steve Carr
Bit of both
Hmm it's a bit of a cop out answer but I think it depends on the individual and the film. What one viewer finds profound another may think is artsy nonsense, it's an obvious statement but it's all subjective. I always found it a bit "meh" that Childish Gambino would never go in to specifics on the "This is America" music video, in a bit of a if you have to ask you'll never know vibe...I can see why, by not being clear cut about the intention you allow viewers to take their own meaning from it but that's when stuff gets taken out of context.
Some directors seem to enjoy throwing the audience off or being intentionally jarring (David Lynch comes to mind), others just want to give a clean account of things. It's like impressionism versus portrait painting, one is a clinical recreation and the other goes beyond the boundaries of reality.
As for critics I always love the note in the dressing room mirror of Micheal Keaton's character in Birdman, "A thing is a thing, not what is said of that thing". It seems like many people just want a pacifying effect from their entertainment these days, understandable if overrun by stress / work / worries that you might just want to be able to disengage the brain and watch John Wick kicking ass or a bunch of CGI superheroes slogging it out to no end.
Not sure if this is just pretentious ramblings or actually even answers your question! I never got paid work in TV / Film but did a lot of sound design + Foley projects back in uni days, was always on the technical side of things rather than the artistic...