I found this quality in The Wind Rises—protagonist achieves greatness through single-minded dedication to his craft (airplane engineering), and sacrifice.
This was the first film I saw that seemed to glorify hard work and focus, rather than an inherent “quality of greatness”. Greatness itself is explicitly divorced from the protagonist, who perceives his ultimate goal through a series of dreams. It never belongs to him, it is something he is always working towards.
It doesn’t do exactly what you’re looking for though, because it also casts doubt on the ultimate achievement, asking, “Was it really worth it?”.
I found this quality in The Wind Rises—protagonist achieves greatness through single-minded dedication to his craft (airplane engineering), and sacrifice.
This was the first film I saw that seemed to glorify hard work and focus, rather than an inherent “quality of greatness”. Greatness itself is explicitly divorced from the protagonist, who perceives his ultimate goal through a series of dreams. It never belongs to him, it is something he is always working towards.
It doesn’t do exactly what you’re looking for though, because it also casts doubt on the ultimate achievement, asking, “Was it really worth it?”.