Cluckewallist
Joined Jan 2019
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Ratings265
Cluckewallist's rating
Reviews8
Cluckewallist's rating
I just watched I'm Thinking of Ending Things. A young woman who is a physicist (I think?) tears up for 2 hours and 14 minutes but I don't think she ever cried. Her boyfriend, who is an expert on musicals (I think?), takes her to have a dinner with his aging family but I don't think anyone ever ate anything throughout the entire runtime of this film. His father doesn't like abstract art because he can't understand it. I was thinking of Waiting for Godot, many times, while watching this film, among other things. I half-expected to cry at the end of the film but I don't think I ever did. Speaking of the ending, I gave it a 9/10 because I don't know much about musicals and it got a bit too abstract and some people can't really understand all that. I felt like the old janitor watching the film myself and I might be a rotting pig but at least we are all parts of the same thing or whatever. Trust me, I'm a physicist.
A group of horrible teens arrive at a small town the residents of which are even more horrible, and there's also superaids in the water supply. The superaids is incidental, and I'd argue it's even a red herring of a threat. The real threat is obviously how a supernaturally horrible human being everybody is.
In the universe of Cabin Fever, no problem ever gets solved since it is always someone else's problem, until it becomes everyone's problem at which point no one has the power to solve it. It is a downward spiral, a representation of entropy that we are all very familiar with in real life and we know from our real life experience that any and every problem the characters in this film face will result in a major catastrophe due to people's unwillingness to deal with it at any of its stages.
Although there are a few intolerably disgusting frames that might get to you, it's more comedy than horror. Because you can't really feel too bad for anyone dying in agony when they kind of all deserve it. I'd argue we shouldn't feel bad, neither for the characters nor for their reflections in real life. Just keep selling the superaids lemonade like the good "BUSINESSMEN" we all are and get over it.
In the universe of Cabin Fever, no problem ever gets solved since it is always someone else's problem, until it becomes everyone's problem at which point no one has the power to solve it. It is a downward spiral, a representation of entropy that we are all very familiar with in real life and we know from our real life experience that any and every problem the characters in this film face will result in a major catastrophe due to people's unwillingness to deal with it at any of its stages.
Although there are a few intolerably disgusting frames that might get to you, it's more comedy than horror. Because you can't really feel too bad for anyone dying in agony when they kind of all deserve it. I'd argue we shouldn't feel bad, neither for the characters nor for their reflections in real life. Just keep selling the superaids lemonade like the good "BUSINESSMEN" we all are and get over it.