Nonostante nutra grossi dubbi sulla loro relazione, una donna parte in viaggio con il nuovo ragazzo Jake per raggiungere la fattoria di famiglia di lui. La giovane incomincia a mettere in du... Leggi tuttoNonostante nutra grossi dubbi sulla loro relazione, una donna parte in viaggio con il nuovo ragazzo Jake per raggiungere la fattoria di famiglia di lui. La giovane incomincia a mettere in dubbio tutto ciò che pensava di sapere.Nonostante nutra grossi dubbi sulla loro relazione, una donna parte in viaggio con il nuovo ragazzo Jake per raggiungere la fattoria di famiglia di lui. La giovane incomincia a mettere in dubbio tutto ciò che pensava di sapere.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 13 vittorie e 102 candidature totali
- Diner Manager
- (as Anthony Grasso)
- The Voice
- (voce)
- Dancing Janitor
- (as Fredrick E. Wodin)
- Diner Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Audience Member
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
But the "spectacularly" in that sentence is not entirely about the failure... rather that he fails while presenting something rather spectacular. The film is gloriously beautiful in the way he brings symbolism and metaphor to life. It is gorgeously filmed and very well acted, although the pacing and editing could use a little less ego and a little more attention to flow. Other directors may have made some different choices in presenting those things that were more grounded in reality as opposed to those that were surreal. Instead, the whole thing was presented in such a state of hyperreality that finding the kernels of truth were impossible.
The biggest failures come in the stark omissions: Kaufman's refusal to share what question is being referred to in those phone calls where the disembodied voice says "there is only one question..." That question is critical and is specifically laid out in the book. It is the entire meaning and motivation. He also fails to ever tie back that question, and the titular phrase, to the only character to whom they actually matter. He also fails to show or explain explicitly what happened to that character in the end, and without that ending, there is no meaning. The film just becomes a very beautiful companion piece to the novel, highlighting some scenes and lending new imagery to them. It is not, in itself, a complete story. It's more of a "mood."
Other than not knowing what the hell was happening, the acting was phenomenal, and so was the dialogue. Now off to the library to try to get something useful out of this story.
Written & directed by Charlie Kaufman, it's only sensible to expect the unexpected when journeying into one of his stories but unlike the clever ideas & concepts that he came up with to explore existentialism in his earlier works, there is no structure to this story. It is just a hotchpotch of thoughts & impressions thrown into the mix and presented without consideration.
The film still brims with a sense of foreboding for the most part if not all and is at its most interesting during the farmhouse scene, thanks to the remarkable talents on screen. David Thewlis & Toni Collette easily steal the show while Jessie Buckley & Jesse Plemons do their best to keep things running. One might expect the story to unfurl its mysteries in the end but this one simply refuses to.
Overall, I'm Thinking of Ending Things is a tedious, frustrating & convoluted mess that defies any logic & understanding and unfolds like a series of thought process simultaneously going inside a troubled mind that doesn't know how to stop them. A bizarre, surreal & confounding experience that keeps getting weirder as it nears its conclusion, Charlie Kaufman's latest film may dazzle his fans with its allegories but it sure isn't for me.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAccording to director Charlie Kaufman, Netflix pushed back against the film's 1.37:1 aspect ratio because they were concerned that viewers would think there was something wrong with their TV.
- BlooperWith the snow storm going on during most of his shift, the janitor would have had more of an accumulation of snow on his pickup than the amount (a little more than a dusting) that he quickly brushed off after his shift.
- Citazioni
Young Woman: It's tragic how few people possess their souls before they die. Nothing is more rare in any man, says Emerson, than an act of his own. And it's quite true. Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation. That's an Oscar Wilde quote.
- Curiosità sui creditiThere's a post-credits scene.
- Colonne sonorePeabody's Improbable History
Written by Frank Comstock (as Frank G. Cornstock)
Courtesy of DreamWorks Animation
I più visti
- How long is I'm Thinking of Ending Things?Powered by Alexa
- Should I read the book before watching the film?
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Pienso en el final
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Red Line Diner - 588 Route 9, Fishkill, New York, Stati Uniti("movie in a movie" scene)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 14 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1