Im usually good with the message behind of a lot of movie
i just can't see it on this one
its just so unclear
what do you think its saying
i loved the movie just it all seemed so unclear to me
The plot I get but i got a breif impression that it had to do with what living without shame does to us or how we can we all destroy ourselfs by living in the past
and i got mixed ideas about what the cow symbolized
or was it just suposed to be funny
I laughed out loud but would you realy say this is a "comedy"
and how did that guy leave with the gun think about all the people who must have searched his stuff for evidence before he left after the other guy got shot you would have thaught he would have just baught his own gun
and how did that guy leave with the gun think about all the people who must have searched his stuff for evidence before he left after the other guy got shot
First off: this is a short film so there wasn't time enough to show Donnelly buying is own gun. second of all: that's called "creative license", chaval ("lad"). And the film doesn't necessarily have to have any message at all. It's just an emotive, heartrendering, poignant, attention-grabbing evocative film. A "slice-of-life" drama.
Incidentally, doesn't that short cow-guy looked like Phil Collins with a beard?
"Una lágrima cayó en la arena...en la arena cayó una lágrima.¡Y OLÉ Y OLÉ!" reply share
and i got mixed ideas about what the cow symbolized
or was it just suposed to be funny
Just supposed to be funny; one of the main characteristics of the movie was to mix darkest tragedy and violence with humor, even slapstick humor
I laughed out loud but would you realy say this is a "comedy"
Black comedy, with the emphasis on black.
and how did that guy leave with the gun think about all the people who must have searched his stuff for evidence before he left after the other guy got shot you would have thaught he would have just baught his own gun
Well to the police he would've looked like a victim or an innocent bystander (which he basically was); quite possibly they'd let him go without frisking him.
As for buying his own gun, it was undoubtedly a spur-of-the-moment decision; also I don't know what the gun control laws are like in Ireland but it may not be all that easy to buy a gun.
reply share
The clue to the philosophy behind the film is the short dialogue regarding God.
How do you deal with death in a Godless world, where it doesn't have much meaning.
The young brat is too cool and indifferent about life and death. The cot-death couple are deeply in sorrow. The protagonist is just confused ("don't know where you are, babe!") and a little sad.
Life becomes fun only if you stop looking at death as a tragedy. Death is constantly around us, in our stories, in our thoughts and memories, in our future. To live life as if death can happen any moment, with no deep meaning behind it, is the "secret" of life.
the young brat dies happy. he is not malicious, doesn't really hurt others, he is just too ballsy (and realizes it when he remarks to himself "did i go overboard there, like.")
can't say the same about everybody else. the woman dies of sorrow, her husband will probably go downhill, the protagonist wanted to kill himself AND in the act of killing himself, realized the meaninglessness of death.
I just caught this on TV. I noted the similarity (dialogue) to in Bruges without knowing the director and thought it was fantastic, made me laugh out loud a few times which at three in the morning isn't a great thing for my asleep girlfriend.
If you were looking for philsophical principles behind the film in its portrayal of the chaos and cruelty of life it adheres to existentialist frameworks with a very funny dash of nilhism. very witty, involving and profound. I love the last line of dialogue as well. in tone it kind of evoked the literature of Celine, namely journey to the end of the night.