Need to think

Alexandrine 2021-10-13 13:05:27

Generally, I would not classify myself as a viewer of CULT films, but the illusion of death should be regarded as an exception. Genius plot control plus perfect performance.
In fact, Perfect donnie has always wondered whether saving the world is his own task. Riman Gangman has been instilling in children for more than a decade the idea that I would not hesitate to be an enemy of the world for XXX, that's cool, isn't it? But it's an idiot. When a person is really told that your world is going to be destroyed and you can save him, how will you react? "Great! Let the bloody hell world go crack!" This is not a normal person, at least a mentally disordered person. Donnie's reaction is perhaps the most logical, he is constantly judging. "The Smurfs are genderless." This tells us clearly that donnie not only has no mental problems, but is also a very clever child, a bit rebellious, but not lonely. Fortunately, his parents are wise. And kind. Donnie has been hesitating, is she going to save the world? At the end of the straight, we saw his kindness when he lost his lover and his loved ones were about to be hurt.
At the end, donnie should be happy. In 28 days, he experienced the happiness that many of us can hardly experience in a lifetime, the love and understanding of parents, the trust of lovers...

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Extended Reading

Donnie Darko quotes

  • [Pommeroy is reading to the class from the 1954 short story "The Destructors" by Graham Greene]

    Karen Pommeroy: "There would be headlines in the papers. Even the grown-up gangs who ran the betting at the all-in wrestling and the Barrow Boys would hear with respect of how Old Misery's house had been destroyed. It was as though this plan had been with him all his life, pondered through the seasons, now in his 15th year crystallized with the pain of puberty." What is Graham Greene trying to communicate with this passage? Why did the children break into Old Misery's House? Joanie?

    Joanie James: They wanted to rob him.

    Karen Pommeroy: Joanie, if you had actually read the short story, which, at a whopping 13 pages, would have kept you up all night, you would know that the children find a great deal of money in the mattress, but they burn it.

  • Gretchen: Um, where do I sit?

    Karen Pommeroy: Sit next to the boy you think is the cutest.

    [the class gasps]

    Karen Pommeroy: Quiet! Let her choose.

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