Record only perceptions and sexual cues

Elda 2022-03-21 09:03:26

tuck a man into a skirt to have sex;

The baby's subjective perspective of vaginal delivery;

Donkey heads dragged out of the sea, maggots and eels everywhere;

Giving in under masturbation, agreeing to eat fish and eventually dying from eating fish;

Spitting, finger licking and sugar splitting, and the girl's turbulent reaction;

Pounce on the girl's lower body.

The director is very good at evoking sensory cues: eating fish, eating fingers, and expressing meaning in his eyes (the part of the dwarf performance is wonderful)

Seeing such a young erotic scene even made me feel sick and completely shocked, and the erotic experience and irreplaceable feeling of first love are likely to come from the "shocked" aesthetic experience (recently love Baudelaire's theory...)

(plus even if she is respected, the needs of boys for girls are also ornamental, spit into her hands and watch her swallow)

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Extended Reading
  • Bettye 2022-03-28 09:01:13

    The most absurd, the most wretched, the darkest, the most twisted, the dwarf... of all, absurd life. The film is startling at the beginning, and then people watch it in all kinds of surprises, all kinds of nausea, all kinds of incest, all kinds of feelings of strangling Oscar. In the case of no subtitles, I still watched the two and a half hours of Evil Xiaosheng's performance. I admired the film and myself at the same time.

  • Kameron 2022-03-17 09:01:10

    The darkest children's movie of all time.

The Tin Drum quotes

  • Oskar Matzerath: There once was a drummer. His name was Oskar. He lost his poor mama, who had eat to much fish. There was once a credulous people... who believed in Santa Claus. But Santa Claus was really... the gas man! There was once a toy merchant. His name was Sigismund Markus... and he sold tin drums lacquered red and white. There was once a drummer. His name was Oskar. There was once a toy merchant... whose name was Markus... and he took all the toys in the world away with him.

  • Jan Bronski: [Jan arrives and sees Alfred getting dressed in Nazi uniform] Going to the demonstration?

    Alfred Matzerath: Yes, at the fairground. A mass rally. Lobsack is speaking, and what a speaker he is. I tell you, these are historic days. A man can't stand asie. You've gotta join in.

    [looking at the newspaper Jan is carrying]

    Alfred Matzerath: You should read the Danzig Sentinel. Your siding with Poland is crazy. I've told you a thousand times.

    Jan Bronski: I am Polish!

    Alfred Matzerath: Think it over