Can a normal person make this movie? I think the director has been stimulated by something?

Sincere 2022-04-20 09:01:33

To put it simply, it's stinky and long, and I insist on watching it because I need to understand all the evaluations of the film so that I won't be biased. I don't know what the idea of ​​making such a work is and where is the meaning. Even if it is a horror film that has no meaning, it should at least be short and concise.

Is it really necessary to make mysteries and fictitious things, and make a bunch of cumbersome ceremonies to distort the original cultural traditions of Northern Europe, what is worth appreciating about cults? Why do some people say yes to this broken movie, pretending to understand it? Your own niche, your own taste?

The only meaningful sentence is: "Aging is meaningless and should be stopped before everything goes bad, before it becomes uncontrollable, it corrupts a person's soul." This can cause us to think that some people are excessively Medical treatment, which is still forcibly maintained by the life support system after brain death, is actually a waste of medical resources; for example, some athletes are very old and their ability is not enough to continue to support, but they still rely on prestige in the first team, overdrafting The image and prestige of the past; by extension, let’s say some talent show stars repeatedly talk about the misfortune of the family, excessively consume the sympathy of the audience, and so on…

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Extended Reading

Midsommar quotes

  • [last lines]

    Mats: [In Swedish; to Ulf as he administers liquid via cotton swab onto his tongue] Take from the yew tree. Feel no pain.

    Mats: [In Swedish; to Ingemar, same procedure] Take from the yew tree. Feel no fear.

  • Irma: [announcing to the river, in Swedish] In thanks and praise, Great Goddess, we bestow upon you this modest gift.

    [Music is played as the men hoist up the lavish tree, run it towards the river, and hurl it into the water. The river gulps the tree down. A horn bellows]

    Sven: [theatrically, in Swedish] Oh no! Did you hear that rumbling? I think she is still hungry.

    Irma: [in Swedish] I heard no rumbling. Did any of you?

    [Grumblings all around. The consensus is "no."]

    Sven: [in Swedish] Ah, well, I suppose it could have been my own belly. But I do not wish to risk offending our generous Mother.

    Irma: [in Swedish] Nor do I. Yet we have already given our finest jewels and most fruitful tree. What else could we possibly offer?

    Bror: [in Swedish] You can use me!

    [the crowd opens up to reveal the young boy. He is adorned in the same jewels and flowers as the tree. His costume is an imitation of the tree's. He is clearly reciting lines]

    Irma: [in Swedish] You, young Bror, wish to offer your life to our beloved Goddess?

    Bror: [in Swedish] If she will have it.

    Sven: [in Swedish] How brave you are, little Bror!

    Bror: [in Swedish] Brave? What is brave in going home?