Hell No

Xzavier 2022-12-28 12:15:17

After puberty, I basically couldn't get my head around a story that was too subversive. Subversion here doesn't mean justifiable death, illness, or the intricacies of character relationships. I like everything calm and perverse, where things are happening, developing, possibly spreading, but natural. Basically, Horace and Pete satisfy all my fantasies and definitions of a wonderful story. To a certain extent, it should be the highest expression of ordinary life, lonely, silent and euphemistically moving. Ten episodes, and the ending song. I don't wanna let go:

Hell no
I can't complain about my problems
I'm okay the way things are
I pull my stool up to the bar
At Horace and Pete's
Sometimes I wonder
Why do we tear ourselves to pieces
I just need some time to think
Or maybe I just need a drink
At Horace and Pete's
Horace and Pete

You know how many moments in life are when you think everything is fine but I really feel bad? This is the background music for the entire film on my vibe. We have a good or bad life, as if we have everything we should have. We have experienced what is worth experiencing. We scold the society and the system, and laugh at young people who only go to the bar to order mix drinks and corona. They are irritable, sensitive, and constantly swearing, swearing, embarrassment, not surprised or curious about what happened suddenly, whatever, it's life anyway, there's no goal, why have goals, I'd like to stay here, but I hate this place . The way the characters exist is like a reasonable paradox, so there are many people's struggles, and it is useless for the author to deliberately pass on the struggles to everyone, because you can't do life, a way of ridicule and practicality: just go and get laid.

In the beginning, I was wondering if the author would start each article from cleaning the bar after getting up at noon. The complex that I can imagine is those acquaintances who show up at the bar on time every day. I think there is no way to go. It is the author's subtle control of language, but fortunately Louis wants to express much more than that. From time to time there will be some silent jokes, the camera stops there, and the words seem to be exhausted. Then after the actors exchange body and eye contact with each other, there is always a blank space that can make you laugh out loud, but the mood is not like that. Watching comedy, point to point, a kind of arrogance whether you want to laugh or not. Basically, it was amazing by the three episodes. The entire 43-minute play was a conversation between two people, paragraphs, wording, control of tone, pauses, and even the length of breathing. Jane is exhausted. The love for words and the control of performances directly touch the audience's spiritual G-spot with an episode of dialogue.

We have been thinking about life, love, and death all our lives, as if there is no bigger leftover to chew on. Uncle Pete's death was a complete surprise to me, and I was caught off guard by this most revealing episode four ending and fifth opening. Before I opened the fifth episode, I was still thinking about what the long shot at the end of the last episode must be trying to explain. Uncle Pete walked out of the bar, the camera followed his back, to the closed door, and stayed on the door for about ten seconds. The shot, there must be something in this shot, especially after he told Pete so passionately and so lonely what love is and what love he has been waiting for his whole life, something must have happened, but he didn't expect it to be death. Even the author is so rude that I'm still stuck in endless fantasies about whether Uncle Pete's death happened after he left, or if it happened a few days later.

I really want to tell those men and women who have been told about various flirting skills after watching Korean dramas, you don't know what a good flirting girl is, please move to see Pete in episode 6, one who knows his left face He is very handsome, has a perfect memory, and has a good demeanor. He is careful and does not hesitate to praise Pete who is always decent and sensitive. This is a 52-year-old middle-aged man who has a mental disorder and relies on drugs to maintain a normal life, but he still feels fit when he takes a selfie in the mirror before going to bed. He is also stubborn and nervous, but he has a very rare thing called feelings. After watching this episode, a friend sent a message: such a beautiful speech, when will some guy say that to me

!!! The wine bottle is actually filled with apple juice, and it is even more fortunate that Ricky actually took the mayor to this century-old pub like a Brooklyn landmark when he was wandering around...

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Extended Reading

Horace and Pete quotes

  • Tom: Just accept the fact that love is rare and it probably won't happen to you, ever.

  • Tom: You can't. That's why they call it falling in love. You can't fall on purpose.