It stuck with me. I have issues with the humor but I’d still say it’s the best movie I’ve seen from this year so far. I liked Swiss Army Man a lot too but not quite as much as Everything Everywhere. Other than this, Northman, Crimes of the Future and Top Gun, this year has been pretty mediocre for new films. Although I’m unironically looking forward to Marcel the Shell.
My sister said I might like Swiss Army Man, but from what little I've heard it sounds kind of boring. Is it worth checking out anon? Is it anything like Everything Everywhere?
>movie is called Everything, Everywhere, All At Once >plot involves crossing through infinite universes >it's one of the most intimate movies I've ever seen >even the minor/joke characters get emotional resolution
How did they do it bros? I feel like I developed a deeper connection to Raccacoonie than to literally any of the characters in Stranger Things.
Who the frick cares. The movie was great. Why you have to nitpick every little detail?
2 years ago
Anonymous
This is the kind of moron who criticizes this movie and calls it reddit. Of course if you're looking for plot holes and inconsistencies in a fantastical movie like this you're going to find them, but that doesn't mean the movie isn't great. Stop nitpicking.
[...]
This.
Be kind, anons. He didn't even say he didn't like it, and it can be fun to think about those kinds of questions even if the answers are irrelevant.
2 years ago
Anonymous
I get you, but I just get mad when dumb Cinemaphileners don't get why this movie is so good and try to find any stupid reason to criticize it.
2 years ago
Anonymous
Not everybody likes everything you like, homosexual.
2 years ago
Anonymous
Not everybody likes everything you like, homosexual.
This is the kind of moron who criticizes this movie and calls it reddit. Of course if you're looking for plot holes and inconsistencies in a fantastical movie like this you're going to find them, but that doesn't mean the movie isn't great. Stop nitpicking.
Who the frick cares. The movie was great. Why you have to nitpick every little detail?
My headcannon is that she was herself becoming a bagel with everything on it, and all of the Joys in all of the worlds collapsed in on themselves in a way that the barriers between them and the rules of reality were breaking down.
That scene with the rocks was so fricking good. I was dying laughing, but it was also so touching, but when the mom rock revealed to have the same eyes from the bat I just lost it. The most I've ever laughed with a movie ever.
>forcing your daughter to live in constant unquantifiable agony is morally superior to letting her an hero >hamfisted message at the end about 'EVERYBODY JUST BE NICE TO EACHOTHER DUP BAD'
The point is that there's snatches of good moments that make all the pain worth it. The daughter pulls herself out of the bagel at the end and agrees with her mom.
1. She wasn't forced. Joy reached her hand out of the bagel first.
2. If she was really in constant unquantifiable agony in the end, she would have gotten back in the bagel or never gotten out in the first place. It's implied that she found peace through reconciliation with her mother. And the destruction of the bagel may have helped to stabilize the multiverse and return Quantum Joy to separate distinct individuals.
Why did it flop?
>A24's highest grossing film
Define flop, anon.
It stuck with me. I have issues with the humor but I’d still say it’s the best movie I’ve seen from this year so far. I liked Swiss Army Man a lot too but not quite as much as Everything Everywhere. Other than this, Northman, Crimes of the Future and Top Gun, this year has been pretty mediocre for new films. Although I’m unironically looking forward to Marcel the Shell.
My sister said I might like Swiss Army Man, but from what little I've heard it sounds kind of boring. Is it worth checking out anon? Is it anything like Everything Everywhere?
It is somewhat similar in tone. It’s definitely not a boring film though
>I’m unironically looking forward to Marcel the Shell.
Stopped right there.
Legit that last act was a solid 10/10
/pol/Blacks and schizo keep crying
I didn't like it. I thought it was way too silly.
It drags a bit but I also really enjoyed it.
>movie is called Everything, Everywhere, All At Once
>plot involves crossing through infinite universes
>it's one of the most intimate movies I've ever seen
>even the minor/joke characters get emotional resolution
How did they do it bros? I feel like I developed a deeper connection to Raccacoonie than to literally any of the characters in Stranger Things.
I didn't understand how the powers worked. If they could only travel mentally, how come the daughter could do all that wacky magical shit?
she (jobu) was simultaneously every version of herself at all times meaning her capabilities are limitless.
I get that, but how does she pull off shit like making dildos appear from nowhere?
I think she goes to a universe where she's got dildos and then flips back to the universe where she's fighting, but nearly instantaneously.
How does she bring the dildos with her if she can only travel mentally?
You got me, I dunno. Might be part of her abilities as the jabberwock.
Who the frick cares. The movie was great. Why you have to nitpick every little detail?
Be kind, anons. He didn't even say he didn't like it, and it can be fun to think about those kinds of questions even if the answers are irrelevant.
I get you, but I just get mad when dumb Cinemaphileners don't get why this movie is so good and try to find any stupid reason to criticize it.
Not everybody likes everything you like, homosexual.
Pls calm down
This is the kind of moron who criticizes this movie and calls it reddit. Of course if you're looking for plot holes and inconsistencies in a fantastical movie like this you're going to find them, but that doesn't mean the movie isn't great. Stop nitpicking.
This.
My headcannon is that she was herself becoming a bagel with everything on it, and all of the Joys in all of the worlds collapsed in on themselves in a way that the barriers between them and the rules of reality were breaking down.
Their daughter became the jabberwocky in the Alpha Universe, so she's everywhere all the time. She even kind of coaches the MC Yeoh on how to do it.
Pretty sure all the fantasy stuff is supposed to metaphorical. At least that's how I interpret the movie.
We’re really not that crazy a couple of mmmals making gravy
don't worry anon, the conversion therapy van is on its way, we'll get you straightened out in no time
That scene with the rocks was so fricking good. I was dying laughing, but it was also so touching, but when the mom rock revealed to have the same eyes from the bat I just lost it. The most I've ever laughed with a movie ever.
>text-only dialogue discussing the human condition and the meaning of life
I felt like the movie was pandering directly to me at that point.
>forcing your daughter to live in constant unquantifiable agony is morally superior to letting her an hero
>hamfisted message at the end about 'EVERYBODY JUST BE NICE TO EACHOTHER DUP BAD'
The point is that there's snatches of good moments that make all the pain worth it. The daughter pulls herself out of the bagel at the end and agrees with her mom.
1. She wasn't forced. Joy reached her hand out of the bagel first.
2. If she was really in constant unquantifiable agony in the end, she would have gotten back in the bagel or never gotten out in the first place. It's implied that she found peace through reconciliation with her mother. And the destruction of the bagel may have helped to stabilize the multiverse and return Quantum Joy to separate distinct individuals.