Pogue Mahone
Well-known member
- Apr 30, 2011
- 10,949
As well as Spoorloos (mentioned above), Speak No Evil plunged into the depths of human existence.
It’s another film that has stayed with me.
It’s another film that has stayed with me.
I think by rock bottom, we could mean tragedy. Where the protagonist has everything and loses it, never to recover it. Hamlet, for example.
Or film noir. Where the protagonist never had it and never ends up with it, despite usually coming close to attaining it or having it briefly. Paradise Alley is a good example of this.
?
Speak No Evil plunged into the depths of human existence.
"I'm the bad guy?" Great call - one of my "go to" films.Falling Down
In vaguely unrelated news, American English is increasingly and insidiously creeping onto NSC. Last week we had ‘defense’ used to describe our back four, which immediately dragged my mind to Douglas’s number/tag plate in Falling Down, not to making mention me wanting to rush out to the nearest McDonald’s and demand a Whammy Burger made JUST as I like it."I'm the bad guy?" Great call - one of my "go to" films.
2 things:-That's what I'm struggling with. So many film arcs involve someone being knocked down and going to a low point, because they have to overcome it and triumph in the end, especially in superhero movies and biographies. How low for it to become rock bottom? (That is largely rhetorical, as you note the parameters are unclear).