>6/10 movie with 10/10 endingOther examples of this?
>>220192559I'm gonna go out on a limb and say Sixth Sense, it was good but wouldn't be nearly as remembered if not for the ending.
Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter
the one
>7/10 movie with a 4/10 endingOther examples of this?
>>220192559This but the opposite.
>>220192559Jesse’s character won because now the bees are safe :-p
>>220192559I kinda feel the opposite. Ending is where the movie loses itself.
>>220193237Did you think it was a “conspiracy theorists bad/internet creates alienation” film until that point?
The Mist
>>220193319I actually think the ending, to Tracy and Lanthimos's intention, serves to condemn Teddy more than if it wasn't real at all. I think the ending is saying it is a good thing that humans were destroyed, which I find abhorrent.
>>220193319No, I hated how the final seconds were a mawkish cannesification of what is supposed to be just plainly absurd. Look guys, alien overlords bad but shes looking pensive so maybe #not all overlords huh? Emma's eyes were making me feel that it was okay even if she were to put my nuts in a vice and that's cool and all because she's hot af but it hogs the spotlight away from the structure to the figurehead.
the korean version is better
I don't like movies where the elites are so blatant with how they view us. It's gauche.
>>220192559Nightmare alley was more of a 8/10 but the ending is 10/10
>>220194070yorgos is saying that conspiracy theorists are pure of heart with good intention but their ire is misplaced at shadows on the wall when it should be towards the oppressive ruling class
>>220194002This is just pure coomer projection stfu.
>>220192559The Mist
>>220192559There’s an expression I think about a lot that says “Conspiracy theorists get the facts wrong but the feelings right.” Everyone who isn’t a member of the moneyed class is aware that they’re being exploited, but in the thralls of their indignation and anger at the system, they struggle to find exactly who is to blame. They might find themselves being led by other well-meaning but equally blind exploited people. In the late 90’s, a group of British university students staged a sit in protest on the lawn of Shell Oil’s CEO, demanding he resign. He wasn’t sure what to tell them; in his mind, if it wasn’t him leading the company it would be someone else. The machine of the corporation absorbs people and contorts their mind into justifying anything so long as it serves their bottom line. Teddy is right that him and everyone he knows have been exploited. The point of the movie, in my opinion, is that the people holding the levers of power have to become so far removed from humanity, from a shared sense of community, that they may as well be aliens.