"Son, what have you done"

Lue 2022-05-09 13:02:00

Sometimes it is really impossible to compare. Werner Herzog gave the answer to what is the really fascinating way of expression in "Black Swan" I watched before this film.

Although David Lynch was named David Lynch at the beginning of the film, apart from many of the faces in his work, the film has at most some shadows of his early films, and he has not much to do with him today. Therefore, I personally feel that this film belongs to a German director.

Herzog used the most traditional narrative thread in the film, using endless but sequential flashbacks to organize the inner trajectory of the protagonist. What I like is that every flashback basically uses a different way of expression, and Herzog is good at it all over the world.

It's a pity that the film only lasts an hour and a half, and it's over before the addiction.

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Extended Reading
  • Jaquelin 2022-05-09 15:29:09

    Will Michael Shannon be the next Jack Nicolson?

  • Miles 2022-05-09 12:04:38

    Transcendental meditation + Oedipus complex is then generated into "action" from the text of classical tragedy. The opposite of "Son" to the same theme that constructs tension is that it focuses on the negation of flashbacks inserted in the context and the original music to eliminate tension. It is replaced by the gaze of the world and a picture of time. The image of the giant infant and the prophet who cannot be separated from the mother is juxtaposed on Brad. The long-extended ending, if not uplifting, is not purely Horso-style self-destruction

My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done quotes

  • Brad Macallam: Why is the whole world staring at me?

  • Detective Hank Havenhurst: [about Brad Macallam] We'll have to do something. I'm gonna try to talk him out.