
Movies That People Still Don't Understand
video description
And you cannot blame anyone else but yourself as you did not watch the movie carefully.
The movie finishes with the same monologue that was at the start saying people are dumb and they see what they want to believe they just see. The monologue at the end is for you, the viewer, and tells you not to believe what the protagonists want you to believe and they wanted to mislead each other all the time.
C. B. had his own twin all the time, this made him able to do his huge tricks while H. J did not have a twin and this is why he had to use a counterpart(drunk guy.
At the final scene what you saw was a trap to convince C. B. about H. Js ability to create a clone, that it wasn't just a trick and Tesla made him the machine. (remember, H. J forced odd requirements like only 100 shows will be there and blind helpers are allowed only. For that trap H. J discovered exactly when C. B visited his show and than made a small change from his regular element which he always performed with the same drunk guy who became much sober and disciplined. This time he indeed made a trap in which his counterpart died. He otherwise always survived as never fell into any water. This time he placed the death trap below the counterpart.
He wanted C. B to see that and get arrested. This way he will be not just sentenced to death but he will die thinking that H. J indeed made it and it wasn't just a trick.
He practically succeeded but did not know that there were 2 C. Bs.
Don't let you get deluded from the massive number of other tanks with bodies. They are just puppets, part of the whole plan of H. J, probably because he expected C. B to break into his storage which did happened only later.
There is no clone machine or magic at all. This is just what you want to believe and the movie plays that game very well.
Date: 2020-07-14
Comments and reviews: 9
Joes
Hey Looper, where is Fight Club?
I expected it to be here. Despite so many loving this movie and continuing to rave about it, nobody has EVER successfully explained the plot to me. Infact, I think it has the most massive plot hole of any movie in history, namely:
If Tyler Durden has been fighting himself, then back in the first fight scene, why would anyone want to join the crazy man fighting himself's fight club? How would fight club ever get going? Why would anyone follow, let alone obey the insane instructions of a clearly schizophrenic madman punching himself in the face?
If anyone feels like they need to defend fight club at this point because you loved it, then please, first watch that fight scene over again, knowing that one of the main protagonists does not exist, and is just his imaginary friend, then work out why the other characters behave as they do. The closest I have come to an explanation is that either they ALL hallucinate the same fight, or they really like shadow boxing.
reply
Hey Looper, where is Fight Club?
I expected it to be here. Despite so many loving this movie and continuing to rave about it, nobody has EVER successfully explained the plot to me. Infact, I think it has the most massive plot hole of any movie in history, namely:
If Tyler Durden has been fighting himself, then back in the first fight scene, why would anyone want to join the crazy man fighting himself's fight club? How would fight club ever get going? Why would anyone follow, let alone obey the insane instructions of a clearly schizophrenic madman punching himself in the face?
If anyone feels like they need to defend fight club at this point because you loved it, then please, first watch that fight scene over again, knowing that one of the main protagonists does not exist, and is just his imaginary friend, then work out why the other characters behave as they do. The closest I have come to an explanation is that either they ALL hallucinate the same fight, or they really like shadow boxing.
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elnubnub
They are all Angier, it doesn't matter which one dies. and the reason he kill his clone in the water tank, it's because he really thinks they won't suffer, and he can never know about the agony of drowning because he his on stage when it happens, everytime, so everytime it happens the clone realize the mistake but can never tell the other Angier
see this like the episode of TNG where Will Riker meet Tom Riker, the clone feel the same think you would feel when you wake up in the morning, imagine the yesterday's you was someone else and you are a new clone every morning
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They are all Angier, it doesn't matter which one dies. and the reason he kill his clone in the water tank, it's because he really thinks they won't suffer, and he can never know about the agony of drowning because he his on stage when it happens, everytime, so everytime it happens the clone realize the mistake but can never tell the other Angier
see this like the episode of TNG where Will Riker meet Tom Riker, the clone feel the same think you would feel when you wake up in the morning, imagine the yesterday's you was someone else and you are a new clone every morning
reply
Joan
well, filth is not confusing at all! the protagonist in mentally ill, and the movie shows you his downfall! and it's very straight to its point, he is disillusioned, that's why you see the strange scenes with his doctor and his wife walking in the streets while she breaks the fourth wall! we also discover his past, that he was accused for his brother's death! this movie, shows the results of losing control over your life and yourself! (sorry for my bad english)
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well, filth is not confusing at all! the protagonist in mentally ill, and the movie shows you his downfall! and it's very straight to its point, he is disillusioned, that's why you see the strange scenes with his doctor and his wife walking in the streets while she breaks the fourth wall! we also discover his past, that he was accused for his brother's death! this movie, shows the results of losing control over your life and yourself! (sorry for my bad english)
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Edward
So let's clear this shit up: Inland Empire makes Mulholland Drive look like a Friends episode. The one with the lesbian smooch, right? Cos in both cases they each had a niiiiice lesbian smooch. Which means Inland Empire is. an episode of South Park where Cartman meets an older gentleman online, and gets raped by the man who, it turns out, is with NAMBLA, the North American Man Boy Love Association. That was a depressing episode! Think on these things.
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So let's clear this shit up: Inland Empire makes Mulholland Drive look like a Friends episode. The one with the lesbian smooch, right? Cos in both cases they each had a niiiiice lesbian smooch. Which means Inland Empire is. an episode of South Park where Cartman meets an older gentleman online, and gets raped by the man who, it turns out, is with NAMBLA, the North American Man Boy Love Association. That was a depressing episode! Think on these things.
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Richard
EraserHead's biggest fault was that It took years to finish and often suspended filming for long periods of time which left its mark on the final version. Today's directors rarely have the skill to bring off an ending that's complex or Avant Garde enough to move a jaded audience now. Indeed the were not it in Kansas anymore moment that directors crave a films conclusion will turn into usually is as pretentious and strange they turn out to be.
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EraserHead's biggest fault was that It took years to finish and often suspended filming for long periods of time which left its mark on the final version. Today's directors rarely have the skill to bring off an ending that's complex or Avant Garde enough to move a jaded audience now. Indeed the were not it in Kansas anymore moment that directors crave a films conclusion will turn into usually is as pretentious and strange they turn out to be.
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Henry
Fight Club. Don't get me wrong, I think most people that have seen it get there general plot. But the true extent of all the films subtle questions and ideas about the world we live in and our place in it as human beings I think even escape me at times. One of those films I think that only the writer of the book could tell you definitively what he was picturing when you point at a particular scene or moment.
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Fight Club. Don't get me wrong, I think most people that have seen it get there general plot. But the true extent of all the films subtle questions and ideas about the world we live in and our place in it as human beings I think even escape me at times. One of those films I think that only the writer of the book could tell you definitively what he was picturing when you point at a particular scene or moment.
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Alan
Because Scarlett was the main character I watched Under the Skin and yes in a general way I got it; but what a dreary flic. Why was she desolving humans and why was she visiting earth? I couldn't figure out why an alien sophisticate enough to travel here has no real game plan other than luring horny guys into a black abyss. Once is all I could stand.
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Because Scarlett was the main character I watched Under the Skin and yes in a general way I got it; but what a dreary flic. Why was she desolving humans and why was she visiting earth? I couldn't figure out why an alien sophisticate enough to travel here has no real game plan other than luring horny guys into a black abyss. Once is all I could stand.
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Charlye'Charleston
Holy Motors.
All the way from A to Z nothing ever REALLY made sense but it was still amazing though.
And it still ended up being a meaningful movie to me even if I'm totally unsure of if my interpretation even comes close to what was intended.
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Holy Motors.
All the way from A to Z nothing ever REALLY made sense but it was still amazing though.
And it still ended up being a meaningful movie to me even if I'm totally unsure of if my interpretation even comes close to what was intended.
reply
Olmstead
Eraserhead is a great film! I have got to see Inland Empire. David Lynch always delivers. Mulholland Drive is, well, there are no words! Watch it 10 times and have your mind blown. Same with Eraserhead; you just can't go wrong with Lynch's films.
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Eraserhead is a great film! I have got to see Inland Empire. David Lynch always delivers. Mulholland Drive is, well, there are no words! Watch it 10 times and have your mind blown. Same with Eraserhead; you just can't go wrong with Lynch's films.
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