Beau is Afraid, Evil Dead Rise, Blackberry

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • UNCENSORED VERSION on Patreon: www.patreon.com/posts/8273229...
    UNCENSORED VERSION on RUclips: • Beau is Afraid, Evil D...
    Edited by: / ikistreams and / heyodamo
    Twitch: / adumplaze
    Cameo: www.cameo.com/Adum
    Telegram: t.me/YMSTelegram
    Merch: teespring.com/stores/yms
    Donate: www.paypal.me/YourMovieSucks
    Subscribestar: www.subscribestar.com/YMS
    Website: www.YourMovie.Sucks
    Bitcoin: www.yourmoviesucks.org/donate/
    Reddit: / yms
    Twitter: / 2gay2lift
    Tiktok: / yms_clips
    Facebook: / yourmoviessuck
    Discord: / discord
    Music: www.anUnkindness.com
    Music channel: / anunkindnessvideo
    Gaming channel: / adumplaze
    Plazethroughs: / adumplazethroughs
    Vlog channel: / darkoceanadam
    Podcast: / sardonicast
    YMS Highlights channel: / ymshighlights
    YMS Clips: / ymsclips
    YMS Eats:
    / @ymseats
    YMS Watch-Alongs: / ymswatchalongs
    Signed blu-rays, dvds, games: www.ebay.ca/usr/anunkindness
    Songs:
    • INSTRUMENTAL UNDERGROU...
    www.epidemicsound.com/
    Timestamps:
    0:00 Beau is Afraid
    3:20 Evil Dead Rise
    11:15 Blackberry
    14:55 Beau is Afraid Spoiler Discussion
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 857

  • @marcusdimario42
    @marcusdimario42 Год назад +1876

    I went to watch beau with some friends. The whole theater sat down and watched until the credits ended. Nobody moved. I don't think anybody knew what to do

    • @Greendalewitch
      @Greendalewitch Год назад +141

      People were walking out in my screening towards the end. I assume they couldnt handle the length of the film or the film itself anymore or both, but I was enthralled by how unconvential the film was.

    • @TheKillerLemons
      @TheKillerLemons Год назад

      My theater fuckin sucked the couple next to me stood up right after the climactic ending and yelled "THAT WAS WORSE THAN SPANGLISH I'M CHOOSING THE NEXT ONE HAHAHA" fuck movie theaters

    • @obscure.reference
      @obscure.reference Год назад +45

      lol all two of you

    • @nicolasbecerra999
      @nicolasbecerra999 Год назад +22

      Marcus Di Mario- they were afraid apparently.

    • @patches5681
      @patches5681 Год назад +36

      Same with my experience! There was a sense of just “what happens next?” So bizarre for a movie that long to just… end

  • @clanofclams2720
    @clanofclams2720 Год назад +1487

    I love how after midsommar came out, Adums main critique was that he wished Ari's movies weren't so blatant about their influences almost to the point of being ripoffs and that he hoped his next movie would be unique and purely his own vision...
    ...and then the monkeys paw curled a finger

    • @epidermiuss
      @epidermiuss Год назад +16

      haha

    • @bluberi9159
      @bluberi9159 Год назад +136

      can’t please pretentious reviewers sometimes

    • @DonaldAMisc
      @DonaldAMisc Год назад +52

      I'm confused. Didn't Adam criticize Midsommar for being too long? And now he's praising the longer Director's Cut?!

    • @bluberi9159
      @bluberi9159 Год назад +97

      @@DonaldAMisc i think he complained specifically about how it drags, which is true

    • @clanofclams2720
      @clanofclams2720 Год назад +4

      @@bluberi9159 dumb

  • @py16667
    @py16667 Год назад +1030

    “IF YOU’RE NOT GONNA KILL THE KID, DON’T PUT THEM IN THE MOVIE!” Might just be my favorite yms quote

    • @klhx
      @klhx Год назад

      You need to be murdered [gestures] 'this much' to be cast in the movie

    • @blueberrydenim4807
      @blueberrydenim4807 Год назад +29

      Even better out of context

    • @devonleeuw
      @devonleeuw Год назад +42

      He wont be happy until he sees a child die on the big screen.

    • @CoOlKyUbI96
      @CoOlKyUbI96 Год назад +14

      @@devonleeuw in Minecraft

    • @jiggycalzone8585
      @jiggycalzone8585 Год назад +9

      "Your expectations were subverted by the film maker doing nothing whatsoever with the idea"
      May be my biggest pet peeve of modern movies

  • @depiglio
    @depiglio Год назад +384

    i think i got really lucky experiencing beau is afraid. i remember telling my bf on the way out of the theater that this is the first time i felt really understood by a movie. i am an autistic girl (diagnosed very recently in life,) and i found myself really resonating with beau's character and the story of the film. the inability to communicate with others properly, seeing the world in a much different and scarier way than my family and peers, trying to understand why im so different than my family and coming to terms with the understanding that i will never amount to what they want me to be. its definitely not a movie i can watch over and over again back to back, but it is definitely a film i will cherish

    • @greyfrank9991
      @greyfrank9991 Год назад +26

      Thank you for sharing this because I feel the same way. Also being autistic I felt his pain when no one could reciprocate his feelings and how the world just doesn’t make sense most of the time. The whole feeling off the world looking at you and like you are just a pawn or a dancing monkey. Also the constant battle with “am I doing the right thing.”
      Never really felt this seen before by a film.

    • @depiglio
      @depiglio Год назад +11

      @@greyfrank9991 THIS THIS THIS!!! I'm so glad someone else got that too!

    • @thomasgarrow1599
      @thomasgarrow1599 Год назад +3

      Exact same here!

    • @ohwow9870
      @ohwow9870 Год назад +4

      I relate to that too, also love the depiglio pfp lol

    • @nGUNNARp
      @nGUNNARp Год назад +6

      When you have an experience with a piece of art where it makes you feel like the creator of the art understands you in ways you could not articulate it really is a beautiful experience. Charlie Kaufman is one who routinely is able to let me know that there are other minds like my mind. Beau is afraid also had this affect on me... And I know I'll be seeing it dozens more times, discovering something about it and myself each time

  • @blastermaster5009
    @blastermaster5009 Год назад +23

    I am 100% dead serious when I say this, but at the 6:28 break, right after Adum goes on his "Just kill the kid!" rant, the advertisement that RUclips decided to play featured one of the Sandy Hook Elementary parents talking about gun control.
    I almost thought it was some kind of gag at first, but that's even too dark for YMS.

  • @EmilyDickmesome
    @EmilyDickmesome Год назад +716

    I'll never get tired of Adum's haterade about child actors and children in movies 😂

    • @MaxMax-zo9vq
      @MaxMax-zo9vq Год назад +53

      Yeah especially when the child’s performance is perfectly okay. Like he complained about the kids’ acting in Petite Maman being distracting and unrealistic, when it was completely naturalistic and believable. It makes me wonder what kinda weird bar he has but it’s hilarious either way.

    • @Scroolewse
      @Scroolewse Год назад +83

      He's right to point it out. It's a fact that kids frequently get hired for their appearance more so than their acting ability, in many movies this is very obvious.
      The reason most people don't notice it is because we're all used to poor performances from kids, but once you start to pay attention to it it becomes very obvious. At least it did for me.

    • @CoOlKyUbI96
      @CoOlKyUbI96 Год назад +20

      I do think his criticism about predominantly featuring a child as part of a horror film’s cast is completely valid. Obviously it’s not as if it’s a reflection of real life opinions, but when it comes to creative pieces of fiction, it does get boring when it’s shown time and time again that children who are among the main cast always have plot armor

    • @sydneyp7867
      @sydneyp7867 Год назад +7

      Me too because he’s correct

    • @Jekuma
      @Jekuma Год назад

      Not to be an asshole - he does have a point. But it gets very very tiresome hearing the same complaint for 10+ years. Feels kinda autistic.

  • @noahjohnson5603
    @noahjohnson5603 Год назад +189

    I feel like Beau was meant to be intentionally unsatisfying/divisive in its climax, but I totally get why people dislike it.
    I personally loved it, but I may be biased because I’ve absolutely loved the previous Aster films. And I’m giving this one a 9 outta 10 (it’s closer to an 8 than a 10).

    • @2dheethbar
      @2dheethbar Год назад +4

      Like the end of Glass? Where the final fight took place on nice sunny day and Bruce dies from getting his face shoved in a puddle of water? ;D

    • @jaredvielstichfilm
      @jaredvielstichfilm Год назад +2

      I agree, I loved the project overall. I can totally understand why people didn't like it and I wouldn't even argue with them. Maybe I'd tell them my POV and then encourage a rewatch but I totally understand. I think it could've benefited from a little more time on the chopping block and maybe some overall tidying up, but yeah! It's a rad project that I am beyond happy exists!

  • @Capgungoesbang
    @Capgungoesbang Год назад +234

    Alyssa Sutherland’s performance is what makes me recommend the movie to others. I don’t think I’d tell people to watch it if it weren’t for her, she was incredible.

    • @remoryu
      @remoryu Год назад +4

      aslaug kicked ass 👏🏼

    • @_all_around_us
      @_all_around_us Год назад +2

      Yes she really was!

    • @Scroolewse
      @Scroolewse Год назад +1

      which one are you talking about

    • @dam2k16
      @dam2k16 Год назад

      @@Scroolewse Deez nuts

    • @ninam4066
      @ninam4066 Год назад +5

      @@Scroolewse She's the demon mom in Evil Dead Rise

  • @mikecannon7405
    @mikecannon7405 Год назад +292

    I really thought Beau is Afraid justified its length by the end of it. *SPOILERS* To me it's definitely supposed to be somewhat of an exhausting experience, but on a second watch it really didn't drag for me like I thought it would, it engages me the whole time. I think the whole ending sequence at his mom's house is incredibly cathartic with Beau beginning to fully realize how much his mother has manipulated him his whole life. It's something he's definitely somewhat conscious of but the Therapist being in on it was such a great turn in that scene. The whole trial section and his death and the way it lingers on it is such a fitting end too, him finally accepting the fate that his guilt and lack of personal control has brought him. I also think that the play sequence did a lot to sort of set us up for the finale. My interpretation of it was that it was Beau coming to terms with everything his life could've possibly been, which is why I think he turns against his mother so much at the end. Anyway, love the movie, hope you watch it again for your 2023 list Adum! Strong 8 to a light 9.

    • @TheLeftistOwl
      @TheLeftistOwl Год назад +34

      I think the theater section is an exploration of what Beau expected his life to be, but again, the things his mother taught him prevented that from being reality. I think the film is a lot more broad that people think and that a lot of the themes aren't just applied to the mother, but to society in general. I think the ending with the trial was to show how people will peer into the lives of others and end up just being spectators to someone's pain instead of actually helping.

    • @ABlackRainbow
      @ABlackRainbow Год назад +16

      I agree, I loved it and think the run time is fine. I feel like it's almost part of the point. It's supposed to be like a gauntlet.

    • @mikecannon7405
      @mikecannon7405 Год назад +20

      @leftistowl9772 Exactly. I think so much can be said about how Beau's mother seems to have complete control of society as well, and how she uses that power to engrain him in her grasp even further. From the food he eats to the medication he takes, all of these things could be potentially dictating his outlook, and all of the insane shit that goes on in the world could be cause of her. I also think that's the reason why the theatre people are off the grid. To showcase how they're free of society's hold, and therefore a parental hold. They've been able to cope with the familial trauma much more effectively.

    • @Kennyjackson47
      @Kennyjackson47 Год назад +23

      man literally drowned in his own guilt

    • @PapaPercules
      @PapaPercules Год назад

      8! 9! Holy shit

  • @bonedrone9869
    @bonedrone9869 Год назад +162

    Maybe we'll get an extended director's cut of Beau is Afraid, considering it was originally four hours long.

    • @MaxMax-zo9vq
      @MaxMax-zo9vq Год назад +29

      Hey id watch it

    • @AlexIsiv
      @AlexIsiv Год назад +6

      hell yeah

    • @mandomero5484
      @mandomero5484 Год назад +4

      A24 just paid 35 million for this shit so unfortunately it probably wouldn’t come anytime soon 😭

    • @dkemil
      @dkemil 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@mandomero5484 directors cut is a good way to make an extra buck after the movie has been out for some time no?

  • @PauLtus_B
    @PauLtus_B Год назад +295

    I'm happy Beau is Afraid was made and that I got to see it in cinema but also: what were they thinking giving this movie this budget?

    • @epidermiuss
      @epidermiuss Год назад +22

      a24 owes ari

    • @PikaYoshi21
      @PikaYoshi21 Год назад

      It wasn’t that high, only around $35 million

    • @JRWall-hf9mq
      @JRWall-hf9mq Год назад +38

      @@PikaYoshi21 - Which is extremely high for a minor studio like A24. That's probably close to 20% of their annual creative budget.

    • @BazallWorks
      @BazallWorks Год назад +32

      I like the theory that it's not about getting their money back but as a brand management exercise, to further push A24s imagine as THE studio for quirky, auteur led independent films. If that's true I can respect them spending their money without the expectation to get it back

    • @MaxMax-zo9vq
      @MaxMax-zo9vq Год назад +25

      It’s probably a combination of Ari Aster bringing them a lot of their previous revenue pre-EEAAO and Ari Aster saying he doesn’t really have respect for time or budget constraints. Props to them for giving him full creative control though, regardless of how people feel about it.
      I can’t imagine them giving him that kind of budget again, but can totally see them giving it to the Daniels

  • @higherquality
    @higherquality Год назад +185

    Saving the spoilers for the end of the video is a very smart idea.
    Well done, keep doing that, I appreciate it

  • @joaosantos5503
    @joaosantos5503 Год назад +47

    Damn, Adam really wanted them to kill that kid.

  • @brodyschum
    @brodyschum Год назад +165

    Upon the first viewing of Beau is afraid, I wasn’t sure how I felt, beyond loving the cinematography, performances, humor and horror, set pieces, etc. I had to see it a second time to find out (at least for me) what the play sequence, love or hate it, was trying to say. Clearly, it’s the only sequence where his mother isn’t somehow at the forefront of his mind. At least for a while. (SPOILERS AHEAD).
    Beau’s mother is definitely manipulating the near entirety of what we see. The red MW (Mona Wasserman) logo appears at the opening credits after A24 and the other production company logos get their screen time. So before we see Beau, hear any dialogue, see a single onscreen credit, we see his mother’s corporate logo, which also appears on the microwave dinners Beau eats, the meds he takes, and the fact that she owns the apartment building in which Beau lives, etc. Also, as Beau shuffles through the chaotic city, a child is scolded by his mother for playing with a model boat, in which a small explosion capsizes it. Another hint that Beau’s worst fears manifest themselves in smaller ways before they happen (the penis monster being a reference to his fear of sexual intimacy because ejaculation will kill him, as stated by his mother as a genetic condition handed down by his father and grandfather).
    The play, to me, is the only true fantasy sequence. The hyper realities of the rest of the film are likely how Beau sees things, ie. a news reporter (with a straight face) referring to a serial killer as “Birthday Boy Stab Man, a circumcised white male who stabs his victims in the neck and guts.” It’s that mix of comedy and horror that make the first and third acts so great. The tragedy of the play sequence is how simple a life Beau wanted for himself. He wished to be a responsible adult who practiced a trade and made a living from it. He wished to raise a family and to be a loving and supportive and doting father. But even in this sequence, his mother’s influence interferes, showing just how much power she’s had over him. “Sometimes, your wife will look like a man,” but this male version of his wife is almost identical to the portrait of Mona’s mother hanging in her home, a mother who was also likely abusive and controlling and ominously placed in her house and thus, their minds.
    This simple life Beau chose for himself is a reflection of how empty his life and even his apartment are: there is no deer head hanging above the rifle that killed it, no model trains, no bookshelf, no beer logos or movie posters adorning his walls, nothing to suggest a male presence who would’ve handed any of this down to him. The only decoration is a blurry picture of his father (upon a second viewing, it’s blurry because Mona’s face is superimposed over his father’s, as she has represented both parents and wouldn’t have it any other way). Even during his fantasy, Mona is subconsciously represented by the flood water (or wasser, in German) drowning out any chance of Beau leading a normal, if incredibly simple life. Mona Wasserman. Mona W. Both woman and man can be made from her first name and last initial, and due to the blurred photo on Beau’s wall and zero subsequent photos or flashbacks showing us Beau’s father, it’s clear she was likely artificially inseminated, hence, Beau’s “father” in the attic being a killer penis, that which was supposed to kill Beau if he ever used it and supposedly killed his father and grandfather, and the very act of having his long-awaited first love killed after an orgasm, solidified Beau’s conditioning that his penis, or the very idea of a penis, is monstrous.
    Though I completely understand (and initially agreed with) the second act being sort of thrown in and a drag down of the chaos of the other two acts, I do see the reasoning. It’s a break for Beau on his journey, such as it is, short-lived as it was. A much-needed respite for what happened and for what was to come.
    There’s also an interesting element of ascribing Beau’s wife in the fantasy to that of the pregnant woman who treated his wounds in the forest (both wearing the green dress). She was obviously kind to Beau, treated his wounds, and was very inviting toward him. And Beau, having not seen the father of her child around, inserts himself into the role….until his mother’s influence takes over, as his own sons remind him that he’s never had sex before, so how could he be their father? And the masked woman narrates his life in this fantasy, also representing Mona, who wears a mask of love and beauty and her underneath is a controlling, manipulative villain. This film shows that the damage done to Beau and how he viewed himself because of it, was inescapable.

    • @apeirotopecrow7957
      @apeirotopecrow7957 Год назад +33

      Completely agree (I have not seen the movie, nor did I read your comment)

    • @TheStanishStudios
      @TheStanishStudios Год назад +16

      Oh shit, thank you for this-missed a lot of these smaller details, and her name meaning “water” adds a lot

    • @mh7233
      @mh7233 Год назад +8

      Having seen it three times now, realizing that the entire thing (and his whole life, really) is essentially a “Truman Show” level of manipulation, testing, and monitoring from his mother has elevated the experience to my “all-time” list. Truly incredible.
      Also, “confessions of a teenage llama queen” will never fail to make me giggle

    • @brodyschum
      @brodyschum Год назад +18

      @@mh7233 The comparison of Beau and Truman cannot be more overstated as in the mosaic picture of Mona made up of all her employees, which is near identical to the cover art on certain DVD copies of The Truman Show. Though Truman is the victim of a morally and ethically bankrupt social experiment, Mona is the engineer of The Beau Show, to the point that his ending is already foreseen. When Beau fast-forwards the security tapes in Roger and Grace’s house, we see that shot of him sitting on the ledge at Mona’s house. He also stops on a still of the capsized boat, which, as I mentioned above, was foreshadowed in one of the earliest scenes in the movie as well. Even his death was meticulously planned and controlled, whereas in The Truman Show, the events are controlled as well, but it isn’t with the intention of KNOWING what will happen if things are manipulated but hoping for a specific outcome in doing so.
      I think the biggest difference is that Beau knows that his mother’s presence is all around him and that whether he’s eating, watching a play, or picking up his meds, her presence, often in the form of that blood red MW logo, is almost everywhere he turns.
      As to the meaning of her omnipresence and omniscience, I’m uncertain if that means that Beau is stuck in a time loop of her control or that he’s making it all up in his head based on things he’s already seen (the mother scolding the boy for capsizing the toy boat, the shot of Beau on the ledge as seen on Roger’s security footage, or the picture of Beau, already developed, framed, and hung on the wall that shows him entering Mona’s house mere moments earlier).
      I took it to mean that she’s in control, past, present, and future. Like in Hereditary, the Graham family was utterly doomed beyond their control from the outset, and there was nothing that could be done, as all the pieces were in motion without their knowledge. The same could be said of Midsommar. Seems Ari Aster has a fascination with characters who are stuck where they are with no ability or will to break free (as their wills to do so are hammered out of them through tragedies that paralyze them). I believe that Ari Aster’s greatest fear is losing his loved ones to shocking and violent deaths and the guilt that (understandably) comes with it. Annie insisted Charlie attend the party with Peter. Dani called, texted, and emailed her sister for what seemed to be hours rather than getting to the house ASAP. Beau is reminded that the very act of his conception killed his father. The events that follow these tragedies become more tragic as guilt eats away at them, and they make terrible moves in life to assuage the guilt that ultimately serve to increase it exponentially, lethally at times. Aster’s first three films could easily be called The Guilt Trilogy, and Beau, being the longest, most epic, and most surreal, would be an excellent ending. Hoping Aster can move on from this overbearing theme. Not that I don’t enjoy them, but, as with Adum’s review and others like his and the weak box office return, it’s becoming apparent that he may want to tackle something fresh next time around, lest he go by way of M. Night Shyamalan.

    • @benkilpatrick2331
      @benkilpatrick2331 Год назад +2

      thanks a lot for putting your insights here. Loved reading this interpretation

  • @Ren722
    @Ren722 Год назад +21

    I remember the ending of Beau is Afraid feeling so real in the theater, especially in Imax it felt fourth wall breaking when others were leaving during the credits but a lot of us were just sitting through and one time even sighed in grief

  • @Lizardguy3
    @Lizardguy3 Год назад +35

    "Kill the child" had me rollin 💀 💀 💀

  • @johnliem7786
    @johnliem7786 Год назад +62

    Evil Dead Rise was definitely more campy than just that one scene… the whole ending where she is drenched in blood wielding a chainsaw yelling one-liners as she kills that grotesque creature with a woodchipper was pretty campy

    • @prestong.6391
      @prestong.6391 11 месяцев назад +6

      also the whole scene where she's trying to convince the kid to open the door was very funny while also keeping the tension

  • @Notsram77
    @Notsram77 Год назад +15

    lol Adum ranting that they need to kill the child character in the movie, so it will please fewer people but help his cold dead soul to feel something
    this makes me laugh

  • @SnobbyLion
    @SnobbyLion Год назад +113

    I love any movie that evokes an interesting emotional reaction on me. Beau is Afraid definitely did that! What a trip!

    • @tajkia2211
      @tajkia2211 Год назад +10

      This is one of the few times I have to disagree with Adum’s take. I thought the movie had a lot of purpose! And the emotions it evoked made for some interesting discussions. Although, the penis dad was a little heavy handed, it was jarring enough to keep me interested. We’ll never see anything like this again!

    • @jpeg204
      @jpeg204 Год назад +2

      @@tajkia2211 yeah the penis dad was my least favorite part of the movie because it was very on the nose with its messaging, but honestly I think if the monster didn’t look as silly and looked more grotesque and actually scary I would’ve enjoyed the scene more

  • @drippyspaff7616
    @drippyspaff7616 Год назад +129

    SPOILER WARNING FOR BEAU IS AFRAID:
    I think Adum’s criticism of the play scene is fair but misses the point of the scene. It’s derived from David Lynch’s theory of the “Eye of the Duck Scene” or a scene with a wildly different style from the rest of the film that also serves as the most important scene thematically (this is especially apparent because Lynch’s most common symbol for these scenes, curtains and a stage, is directly lifted for this film). Beau spends the movie experiencing the worst fears that his guilt addled mind can think of but then for a moment he experiences a world in which his life is narrated to fit into a story. He relinquishes his ability to choose what he does and instead puts his in life in the hands of the angel. The angel promises a hard life, but a fulfilling one with a perfect pay off. It directly parallels what religions or cults might promise. This idea of a simple life promised by an unrealistic or mysterious group also ties into Aster’s themes in Midsommar. But anyway, the scene ends with the realization that he cannot have a happy ending with his three sons due to his personal history with celibacy. It’s the only delusion that Beau himself can break out of. That’s what makes it so important. The scene criticizes religious beliefs (likening them to a cult), it criticizes incel culture and the way they believe happiness can be manifested, and it shows that Beau has the power to break from his delusions if he can work through his extreme guilt and fear. It’s the most important scene in the movie.

    • @AlexIsiv
      @AlexIsiv Год назад +2

      also i think that understanding why this scene is there, is equal to understanding the movie as a whole

    • @Joe_blow121
      @Joe_blow121 Год назад +2

      Essay moment

    • @floweryhue1214
      @floweryhue1214 Год назад +1

      wow great write up, that genuinely makes a lot of sense, i honestly wish the last third of the movie (everything in the mothers house, trial) just had more pay off for me and this movie would have really been great. the last hour drags and it leaves me feeling a little cold after everything that was set up in the first 2.

    • @MacGolfball
      @MacGolfball Год назад +1

      Very well written

    • @abanana2561
      @abanana2561 Год назад

      sure but it slogs like hell at that point

  • @andreadamon2197
    @andreadamon2197 Год назад +53

    While I do agree that the film would’ve been better if it were a bit shorter (though I’d probably only cut 30-40 minutes rather than an hour), I still love what this film is and what it stands for and I feel like the second half represents the crash and draining of energy that happens after that initial jolt of an anxiety attack, but that’s just me

    • @MaxMax-zo9vq
      @MaxMax-zo9vq Год назад +3

      Yeah I agree, I also thought the whole sequence at the commune was beautiful

  • @connorsmith75
    @connorsmith75 Год назад +19

    Met Matt and Jay after a BlackBerry screening in Toronto, first time seeing a movie alone and one of the best experiences of my life. Thanks for talking about NTBTS, getting into Matt’s work has had such a profound impact on my life!

  • @quitpayload
    @quitpayload Год назад +3

    I was reading a Reddit discussion thread about Beau is Afraid, and someone described it as an episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm that takes place in hell

  • @bencarlson4300
    @bencarlson4300 Год назад +14

    The play sequence is possibly my favorite part of the film, it mostly diverts from the comic tone and just feels like a perfect little short film that I felt added a lot to show how Beau could have been in different circumstances. I also recognized that it was a direct homage to the Red Shoes dance sequence, which is also very beautifully executed but is ultimately “unnecessary” to the larger narrative, but that sequence is largely what the Red Shoes is known for.

  • @mackielunkey2205
    @mackielunkey2205 Год назад +21

    Another interesting thing about Blackberry is how the film looks less grainy over time the more it jumps to the present. I also loved how the writers were never afraid to make their characters scummy unlike showing them in a more glorified light liek in other biopics.
    Overall, it’s an 8/10 the best movie I’ve watched so far.

    • @Wired4Life2
      @Wired4Life2 Год назад

      _BlackBerry_ pulled that cinematography trick well, but _Steve Jobs_ did it slightly better.

    • @bobbyadamson2333
      @bobbyadamson2333 7 месяцев назад +1

      It’s an 8/10 and also the *best movie you’ve seen* so far?? 🤔

    • @mackielunkey2205
      @mackielunkey2205 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@bobbyadamson2333 I mean, in 2023 at that time lol. MANY films surpassed it.

  • @hoolsv9063
    @hoolsv9063 Год назад +59

    Beau is afraid broke me, my favorite movie of the year so far. As someone with clinically treated anxiety and agoraphobia, I couldn’t stop comparing Beau’s fears and traumas to my own. Its definitely not for everybody and the length is enough to turn most people away, but I would 100% recommend if you want to have a unique cinematic experience. It’s refreshing to see a movie thats not afraid to alienate some of its audience. Its also surprisingly hilarious. The dark sense of humor lampoons these common anxieties without feeling mean spirited towards it’s intended audience. A sensory nightmare as well as delight, this film is the most Ari Aster film thats ever Ari Astered if you get my gist.
    Thanks for the solid review. Always excited to hear your nuanced take, Adam.

  • @bryceman274
    @bryceman274 Год назад +17

    Beau is afraid is my favorite movie of the year so far and it’s not close. I haven’t seen a movie so successful at creating both euphoria and anxiety at the same time. I loved the experience enough that I didn’t hate the runtime, and the more I think about it or rewatch it the more I get out of it!

  • @DrawtoonzStudio
    @DrawtoonzStudio Год назад +7

    Freakin' Del Toro's Pinocchio was an animated family film and that movie's _inciting incident_ is a child dying. I don't think people would be too broken over a child dying in a horror movie.

  • @lancesilvis4085
    @lancesilvis4085 Год назад +7

    Child actor: *exists*
    Adum: >:(

  • @tarmec261
    @tarmec261 Год назад +21

    The experience I got out of Beau was spectacular. Some things had happened in my life somewhat recently that lead to me being very susceptible to the imagery and performances and it made me feel this unnerving sense of dread in the second half. The messages of the movie weren’t lost on me, but I think I interpreted it in a different way than intended.
    Anyway, for some people they’ll really connect to this and others won’t. I’m sorry you couldn’t get the same visceral experience out of the film that I did. One of my favorites.

  • @kristin7121
    @kristin7121 Год назад +15

    I’ve been looking forward to your Beau is Afraid review for a month now! So happy!

  • @elainejsta
    @elainejsta Год назад +6

    "It's old, it's tiring, it's manipulative, it's bullshit, I'm not falling for it, stop doing it" is the type of mentality I've had during this entire year tbh

  • @etalex7074
    @etalex7074 Год назад +49

    Damn I wish Beau is Afraid was playing near me like his other two films did

    • @MaxMax-zo9vq
      @MaxMax-zo9vq Год назад

      Did it not okay near you when it came out? I thought it went wide

    • @WoahLookAtThatFreak
      @WoahLookAtThatFreak Год назад +1

      I had to drive 45 minutes to an arthouse theater I had never been to just to see it. Was totally worth it 😂

  • @meeptop
    @meeptop Год назад +12

    I'm glad you explained why you felt as if Beau is Afraid should've been shorter, because that seems to be the general consensus. I think your perspective on it is very reasonable and I feel as though I can actually understand the mechanics as to why the pacing felt so sluggish to everyone (myself included) in the second half.
    Personally though, in retrospect, I feel exactly the opposite regarding the length. I feel as though the methodical pace and elongation of sequences was a deliberate way to make us feel just how long he's been suffering, and how his trauma has shaped every aspect of his life from birth to death. So the length feels justified to me, in so much as allowing the audience to grasp how grueling and endless living your entire life with this level of guilt and anxiety truly feels. Which makes the abrupt and somewhat unsatisfying ending more of a statement than it would be if we had just had a brisk, chaotic experience that ends just as abruptly as it began.
    I remember in the Sardonicast episode you did with Matt Johnson, he explained his theory that Under the Silver Lake felt unruly because David Robert Mitchell put in a hidden meaning and had to keep everything in the final cut in order to make that hidden meaning decipherable. I think the same could apply here.
    For all my gripes, Ari Aster is a very intentional filmmaker. Hereditary and Midsommar are both laced with symbolism and hidden details, and I'd imagine Beau is Afraid is the same. Reportedly this film was cut from 4 hours to 3 hours, so maybe he felt as if he couldn't cut anymore without losing those hidden details that were important to him. I'm hoping everyone, yourself included, feels more positively about the film as the years go on and discussions about those various details and meanings are hopefully uncovered. Just like you helped to do with your "Genius of Synecdoche, New York" series!
    Who knows though, maybe it'll just get more grating and self indulgent with time and the only person who will truly love every part of it will be Aster himself lmao.

  • @adraino7345
    @adraino7345 Год назад +60

    Child actor for the little girl was actually phenomenal (ok relative to children actors) in like two scenes. But those were the scenes when they let her be a kid and goofy because you can just let her act more natural. When they made her afraid it always looked like she was about to tell her mommy she pooped her pants not that she was experiencing shit your pants terror.

    • @Ashbrash1998
      @Ashbrash1998 Год назад

      I mean in both ahe did shit her pants

    • @bigcraudio3066
      @bigcraudio3066 Год назад +9

      Yeah, it felt like it was more fault of the producers who didn't know how to write a child than the actress herself.

    • @MrOrgeston
      @MrOrgeston Год назад +6

      Whichever is happening though, poop in pants is a guarantee.

  • @Treem0re
    @Treem0re Год назад +101

    After the credits rolled for Beau is Afraid I wanted even more, I was convinced there could be a little more. I know some find it long but I honestly thought it was perfect by the time it ended I almost felt like it was too short. I think I was just feeling it extra hard compared to his other two

    • @MaxMax-zo9vq
      @MaxMax-zo9vq Год назад +10

      Yeah a movie that long has never gone by that quickly for me. Aside from maybe Love Exposure

    • @bigmeatball7467
      @bigmeatball7467 Год назад +6

      Beau is Afraid was just staggeringly good for me, especially as somebody who suffers from extreme social paranoia and has generalized anxiety disorder.
      Such an interesting and provocative movie, it’s been a long time since I had an experience like that in the theater, and I’m excited to purchase it for myself when it releases.
      It was emotionally draining and the kind of thing I’d likely only be able to go through once every couple years, but I think that’d be worth it. More power to Adum for his opinion on it, but man did it just hit some of the right notes for me. Like an extremely tough therapy session crammed into a three hour Odyssey, which is something that just isn’t done very often.

    • @ABlackRainbow
      @ABlackRainbow Год назад +4

      @@bigmeatball7467 Yeah I wonder how much this film is for people with issues like that. I have CPTSD and anxiety disorders, and this film felt like it was calling me out, directly. Especially the first section. Living in the inner city with extreme anxiety, hearing people screaming outside of your apartment. Whenever I go out, in the back of my mind, it's like... am I gonna get stabbed today by a naked man in the street? Hahaha 10/10 movie for me, honestly.

    • @draculaflowfan
      @draculaflowfan Год назад +1

      I did not feel the same honestly, by the time Beau got to the funeral I was reeeallly starting to feel the runtime.

    • @mintyhippo8125
      @mintyhippo8125 Год назад

      @@ABlackRainbowIt’s funny because while the anxiety is relatable, I felt it was not cathartic to see. It just felt like, “why did they show what I fear with surround sound.” It was like watching a nightmare. I just felt bad for Beau and left lol

  • @xemerzis
    @xemerzis Год назад +26

    Spoilers for Beau: I appreciate your take on the movie and it's certainly not going to perfectly gel with everyone but I can't help but feel the loss of momentum in the middle is a very deliberate choice. A large portion of the film shows not just anxiety but questions its source, that so much of the misery one sees in the world can be caused by their parents. Beau lives in a terrible apartment in a terrible part of town yet his mother is rich enough to essentially be omnipotent. The love of his life works for her and he even has a picture of Elaine as an adult yet all his memories of her are when they were children, there is clearly some amount of happiness that is being deliberately kept from him even in the beginning. The play I feel is the one moment when he finally gets out from his mother's influence, a place where she is not. It is here that he both is the happiest he ever is in the film (because a narrator repeatedly tells him what to do) and where the first cracks in his mother's lies show through, where he learns his father is alive, where the seeds of his true disobedience later are planted. The momentum dies here because it is meant to feel like a completely different place compared to everywhere else we've seen and everywhere else we will see, and I for one think it's a wonderful piece of the puzzle.

  • @Ederick_11
    @Ederick_11 Год назад +8

    My rating for Beau is Afraid is 9/10. But giving the logistics of the movie and that run time does come across as an hour that could have been removed. I may have fallen in love with the incredibly purposeful detail that is hidden as clues all throughout the movie.
    And from that very first scene from birth, and to the end as death. What I appreciated the most was that it felt like a lifetime, and that was the purpose. You lived a life of failure and regrets. And as a paranoid individual already, from trauma I have experienced, the film felt, uncanny. As if I had been watching a more distraught version of myself.
    Which is why personally for me. It's a 9/10.

  • @chellybub
    @chellybub Год назад +11

    Good on Sung Won Cho, he's got a great range for vocal performances, it will be cool to see him in a film where he does some of that talkie and walkie action ❤

  • @davidkippy101
    @davidkippy101 Год назад +3

    "the chaotic energy dissipates after the second half"
    So... it ended

  • @tinkerella
    @tinkerella Год назад +4

    Blackberry was seriously incredible. Like, I went in cold and I was blown away. I also lived in Waterloo and now Toronto and this might be THE most Ontario movie ever made lmfao

  • @ColombianThunder
    @ColombianThunder Год назад +32

    I respect Beau Is Afraid a lot and I'm happy I got to see something like that in an AMC theater and not some random theater 2 hours away from me. Even though I didn't love it, and find that it drags a lot after the first act, there's nothing else like it, and I still think about certain aspects and scenes that were terrifying. But yeah, unsatisfying is a great way to describe it

  • @bncbcbbc31
    @bncbcbbc31 Год назад +13

    Beau is afraid is the Citizen Kane of Perspective vs Reality. we have no idea what’s real because beau as well has no idea what’s real or facade. which is a reflection of how he’s been conditioned by his mom, which is why I love the ending. how the audience just sits there like we did at the end of the movie. a reflection to how we as the audience just watch Beau drown unable to help him and why he’s afraid of us.

    • @adamgates1142
      @adamgates1142 Год назад

      It's all real except for his daydream at the play

    • @bencarlson4300
      @bencarlson4300 Год назад +1

      Even the stuff in the attic? How?

  • @yrnjv773
    @yrnjv773 Год назад +6

    I thought the movie needed to be 3 hours, i felt trapped in my seat for the whole movie and when it ended i was stuck in my seat still just thinking about it and the next day i couldn’t get over what i watched. im just glad this movie exists because it really is a touching movie that i can relate too .

  • @aldraone-mu5yg
    @aldraone-mu5yg Год назад +3

    I didn’t pick up on the hyper anxiety theme at first, mainly because some parts of LA are actually like that.

  • @sebby2494
    @sebby2494 Год назад +39

    Easily 10/10 for me, best full-length since Prospero's Books. The coded Hermetic visuals (monoliths, triangles, pentagles, rainbows - see Venezuelan flag shirt, low-hanging circles, fib spirals) also OZ spelled in multiple frames, brown recluse (violin on head - traditional Jewish instrument) and 4 brass elephants under the TV (4 World Elephants in Hinduism) with 4 sons in Torah (wise, simple, wicked, one who cannot form questions - Beau represents each of these - as in Oz with Tinman, Scarecrow, Lion - no heart, brains or courage) - 40 years to find his "sons". As precluded by the Mona/Beau scene in trailer 2 with low-hanging fixed circle (deception) projecting inverted pentangles through fish (fertility) as fib spiral (true to nature) on to his "wall", women in Beau's life use emerald green (unconditional love/promised land), masks, actors (Mona employs Beau's Dad, Elaine - Beau's literal light, to deliver with a grin the death of a man in water then proclaim her "love" for him before disappearing - the fake family - handyman and probably everyone who invades Jewish homeland/apartment and the maid who literally raises him) and other outright lies (her lawyer claiming to Beau how Mona's dead - over a low-hanging brick spiral - the BBQ knobs resemble those which Wendy Torrance and the Wizard of Oz are framed with). Look for OZ spelled out in the framework of Mona's house as the camera pans left in the second-to-last scene - and in the Final Judgement monolith as a complete rainbow forms alongside Dr. Cohen. Mona's breaking her bar into water symbolizes river morphology - and how that which is above is also below - sun/moon/father/mother/soul/matter - you'll find the Emerald Tablet at its very core.

    • @GlitzPixie
      @GlitzPixie Год назад +5

      this movie seems made only for those with extremely extensive niche knowledge. Which I think is cool if true

    • @abednegokurio9244
      @abednegokurio9244 Год назад

      Jesse what the fuck are you talking about?

    • @channel_00000
      @channel_00000 Год назад +1

      Absolutely agrew

    • @GlitzPixie
      @GlitzPixie Год назад +8

      @@TheBeastlyFollower people are allowed to like and make whatever kinds of art they want dude, it doesn't have to threaten you.

    • @TheStanishStudios
      @TheStanishStudios Год назад +3

      @@TheBeastlyFollower Why are you here then, in this video?

  • @lukaotyrba6295
    @lukaotyrba6295 Год назад +1

    Adum *banters about horror movies never putting kids in danger*
    Also him 3 minutes prior *mentions 'Hereditary'*

  • @firstnamelastname816
    @firstnamelastname816 Год назад +11

    Beau is Afraid is my first 10 of the year. A tragic odyssey about attachment and self-loathing. Gorgeous.

  • @py16667
    @py16667 Год назад +8

    I kinda disagree with EDR only having the one cheesy moment with the eyeball, I thought it was full of cheesy moments with the mom character & a bit at the ending sequence as well with the crazy monster

  • @noone3216
    @noone3216 Год назад +3

    There was a more savage cheese grater scene in an episode of ren n stimpy, where stimpy flexes his elbow, vigorously works it with a cheese grater, then grabs a half of a lemon, and juices it on said elbow like he's using one of those pointy juicer utensils.
    This was nothing compared to that.

  • @djbillybool8173
    @djbillybool8173 Год назад +4

    my favorite ari aster film, that play sequence was mesmerizing

  • @jeremyusreevu237
    @jeremyusreevu237 Год назад +17

    I loved Beau Is Afraid. It's just so weird and cool!

    • @rismen9033
      @rismen9033 Год назад +2

      Hey! It's niche Internet celebrity Jeremy U's ReevuU

  • @toxicsugarart2103
    @toxicsugarart2103 Год назад +9

    I can’t believe we’ve had autistic representation this whole time in the form of little kids who don’t show the emotions you’d expect them to ❤

  • @MaxibonHR
    @MaxibonHR 4 месяца назад +1

    I felt like the trailers for Beau is Afraid were basically for the second half of the movie only, which I honestly really loved, but you’re right, it feels like a movie and another half of a movie were edited together. Edited very well together, but still. I actually really enjoyed Beau is Afraid, but your criticisms are very valid

  • @babeythot
    @babeythot Год назад +4

    6:58 SOMEONE QUICK SHOW ADAM THE TOXIC AVENGER A CHILD GETS RUN OVER IN THE FIRST THIRTY MINUTES

  • @jakobmathews1685
    @jakobmathews1685 Год назад +29

    Take a shot for every time Adum releases a review for a film with a child in it where they either give a bad performance or aren’t in danger/don’t die. You’d need to seek medical attention immediately lol

  • @walterhenderson1766
    @walterhenderson1766 Год назад +4

    Love your content Adum

  • @conchetumadrex1675
    @conchetumadrex1675 Год назад +61

    I loved Beau is Afraid. I think it speaks to a really specific demographic of the audience: those with anxiety disorders and those with narcissistic parents. Specially to the male audience (because there is a lot of subtext about masculinity being presented in the movie). I remember watching this in the theatre and everyone would just laugh really hard at the attic scene, while I was bawling my eyes out lol. Maybe because of how the final act spoke to me. The things that the mother says to Beau are word for word what an abusive and manipulative parent would tell their kids. It hits hard if you've lived situations like this, but If you don't it's probably just funny or confusing.
    Great movie nonetheless, tho I can see why it got so many mixed reviews!

    • @noshua2326
      @noshua2326 Год назад +14

      I think one thing a lot of people don’t touch on is the isolation beau experienced due to his severe anxiety and narcissistic mother, any positive human connections he has is underlined with an extreme fear of irrational outcomes exasperated by his mothers parenting it’s something I resonated a lot with. And like you said there were many scenes where people in the theater who don’t have these anxieties and family trauma were laughing where I and others were left frozen in anxiety and or crying.

    • @Doggycat17
      @Doggycat17 Год назад +4

      You've convinced me to watch this movie

    • @theshockinglyeloquentdog9945
      @theshockinglyeloquentdog9945 Год назад +7

      that's how i felt about the phone call scene. I've heard people say it was funny but i just found it really sad

    • @DustyPangolin
      @DustyPangolin Год назад +5

      ​@@theshockinglyeloquentdog9945 God me too!! I have such a fear of something like that happening so I was crying throughout that whole scene, it was weird to hear afterward that people thought that scene was funny.

    • @bigmeatball7467
      @bigmeatball7467 Год назад +4

      Nobody in my theater laughed once.
      I almost cried multiple times because I suffer from only a moderately lesser form of social paranoia and GAD.
      It’s not for everybody and is a difficult to approach film, but goddamn am I glad it was made, and I’m kind of heartbroken it isn’t making even a third of its budget back.
      It made my condition feel more ‘seen’ than in almost any other movie I’ve watched before.

  • @OlioH_
    @OlioH_ Год назад +14

    If you want a 10/10 from Adum, you know what you must do.

    • @TheReZisTLust
      @TheReZisTLust Год назад +1

      Live action Cats

    • @user-gi5lq2xl4p
      @user-gi5lq2xl4p Год назад

      @@TheReZisTLust Except they quit being cowards and actually give the actors the Cat Surgery.

  • @sammytweedy7655
    @sammytweedy7655 Год назад +13

    Don't cut a single thing from BIA. Yeah it's not for everyone, but it's an easy 10/10 film in my eyes and an instant favorite. I've never been more emersed, and it's 3 hour runtime facilitated that emersion. It felt like more of an experience than just a movie. I've heard multiple people and reviewers say "it feels like this movie was made specifically for me" and I had the same feeling, so it's definitely for a specific type of person.

  • @jpeg204
    @jpeg204 Год назад +4

    I thought the play sequence in Beau was brilliant, and to me it didn’t feel out of place at all, obviously from a technical standpoint the presentation is phenomenal, but the thematic purpose also hits very hard for me. It’s clearly supposed to represent Beau’s fantasy, which I think was a necessary addition to the film because (for me at least) it humanized Beau a lot and made me empathize with him more, and also allowed for a moment of juxtaposition from his constant fears and anxieties being at the forefront, to a moment of his hopes and wishes, which felt needed. The play story feels a bit silly and all over the place because he’s making it up in his head in that moment, and the sequence feels as if it drags on just slightly too long (especially when hugging his sons) because Beau wants to stay in that fantasy for as long as he can, but then it all ends in such a heartbreaking yet funny way when his “sons” remind him that he can’t even have children, and that this entire fantasy wouldn’t be possible even if he tried, and just like that he snaps out of it, right back to his biggest fears unfolding in front of him. It definitely slowed down the pacing a lot, but it felt like such a beautiful moment of introspection into the character and it added a lot to the film for me.

  • @herosam1390
    @herosam1390 Год назад +4

    "Just kill the kid!!"
    -YMS 2023

  • @baileywehrman6891
    @baileywehrman6891 Год назад

    Watching under the silver lake bc of what you said thanks for another amazing rec Adam!!! ❤

  • @tomlangford1999
    @tomlangford1999 11 месяцев назад +1

    EDR killed two of it's three child characters, and Adum's infanticidal blood lust still was not satiated

  • @MrSuckeragi
    @MrSuckeragi Год назад +1

    "Kill the Kids" - just reminds me of Fate: Zero - my Favorite anime of all time. NO KIDS WERE SAFE IN THAT ONE... it was terrifying for an anime.

  • @alexmaverick6647
    @alexmaverick6647 Год назад +2

    Adum be channeling his inner Alex Jones. “DESTROY THE CHILD.”

  • @anthonymartensen3164
    @anthonymartensen3164 Год назад +4

    I love Beau is Afraid. Some of the ideas kind of popped more for me after a 2nd viewing.

  • @ScreamingLake
    @ScreamingLake Год назад +2

    Couldn't agree more about Beau is Afraid. To me it just felt like a vanity project for Ari Aster to showcase his filmmaking abilities but it was so obtusely inaccessible and overlong that it entirely lost its luster starting in the forest and from there on out. The runtime is suggestive of it being some great epic or hero's journey but it was lacking any sense of structure to be anything close to that. It wasn't grounded in any trace of reality whatsoever as it went on to the point where the narrative hardly even existed and it wasn't even about "not getting it" but rather there was no longer anything to get. Aster just wanted to commit fully to the absurdity of the film at the expense of any coherence, which may appeal to some but just lost me entirely by the end.

  • @kylecampbell7141
    @kylecampbell7141 Год назад +1

    I love that Beau and Evil Dead were reviewed together because I viewed these two movies back to back in one (long) trip to the theater

  • @Wraiven22
    @Wraiven22 Год назад +2

    I honestly didn’t even expect Evil Dead Rise to kill characters that it did already, so I was satisfied personally

  • @solidsnake2085
    @solidsnake2085 Год назад +2

    I've been waiting for Beau is Afraid.

  • @davii2663
    @davii2663 Год назад +8

    Ari Aster smiling is very uncanny

  • @Owlsdontsleepatnight
    @Owlsdontsleepatnight Год назад +5

    I thought the fact that all of the setups led to unsatisfying payoffs was done on purpose. Beau’s whole life is filled with fear and disappointment so he was disappointing the audience alongside Beau.

  • @redisthecoolestcolour
    @redisthecoolestcolour Год назад +2

    6:24 "JUST KILL THE KID!" Adum somehow has seen me watching Knock at The Cabin...

  • @badis899
    @badis899 8 месяцев назад

    His face when he was walking out from his mother's house is exactly mine after the movie ended. I seriously thought the second half of the movie is the effect of the joint he smoked in the car earlier.

  • @Hopesfallout
    @Hopesfallout Год назад +2

    I agree with killing the child horribly, but please, for the love of god Adum, never call Haneke "Michelle" again.

  • @Onyxiate
    @Onyxiate 5 месяцев назад +1

    My interpretation of the play is that Beau gets a glance into a world unshackled by his mother and free of his guilt. He finds love, has sex, has kids, has purpose - but his mother still influences it by sending a storm and destroying all he loved before making his way back and revealing that it was never his story to begin with and he was merely seeing something he could never experience.

    • @rokoi3
      @rokoi3 Месяц назад

      well said

  • @AshleyJubilee
    @AshleyJubilee 11 месяцев назад

    im glad im not the only one who made the synecdoche new york comparison. i have been ruminating on an entire piece comparing the two movies, so im glad im not the only one who saw that comparison

  • @priqq1
    @priqq1 Год назад +3

    I mean, i will say Parker Poseys final moments in the film had me cackling. It was brilliant, akward, embarrassing, hilarious. I havent gotten that mariah carey song out of my head since watching it 2 weeks ago 😆😆😆😆

  • @kirkwulf
    @kirkwulf Год назад +9

    I absolutely loved Beau is Afraid.

  • @RobVespa
    @RobVespa Год назад

    Can't wait to see Beau is Afraid! I'm also looking forward to watching Evil Dead Rise. You put Blackberry and Matt Johnson on my radar.

  • @CoalTen59
    @CoalTen59 Год назад +1

    Fellow youtuber Matthias Wandel worked on the original Blackberry and was consulted during the production of the book that the movie takes a lot from. He did a video on his second channel, "
    Matthias random stuff" discussing the historical accuracy of the trailer. I found it to be very interesting.

  • @robinsandquist
    @robinsandquist Год назад +2

    Interesting hearing about your take in Beau is Afraid. Saw it in the theatre yesterday, so there's a lot to still unpack.
    Spoiler-warning.
    I had a very similar take on the plot and I liked it, there's something that grabbed me with the overall story and feel of the film. I could almost see some parallells with I'm Thinking of Ending Things - which was a film that I didn't really gel with after watching it - but after some reflection and also reading into the symbolism of a lot of the ideas, it connected and I started to appreciate the experience. So going into Beau is Afraid (having heard of a Kaufman-esque type of film beforehand) I saw it with all of this in mind.
    I'm a bit reminded of Inland Empire, someone else mentioned Lynch in the comments, which is a very nightmarish film and took me a while to understand other than just dizzying terror. It's also 3 hours, which at the time I didn't really feel was justified, but after rewatching it I've learned to like these kind of films that let all of their ideas out, at the expense of good pacing, but it transforms the film into much more of a ''mood piece'', which I fully understand isn't everyone's cup of tea. My friends felt similarly about the length of Beau is Afraid, I didn't mind it all and actually don't know what I would like to cut out to enhance the pacing. Loved the theatre setting (again Kaufman/Lynch) and I felt that the film grew into something else at that point, a dream of another (happier) life.

  • @BrentStarling
    @BrentStarling Год назад +6

    You know the new Evil Dead’s cinematography must be good when Mike, Jay, and Adam ALL say it’s well-shot.

    • @WoahLookAtThatFreak
      @WoahLookAtThatFreak Год назад

      Like RLM I also thought that was the one major positive I can say about the movie.

    • @bilbobaggins9451
      @bilbobaggins9451 8 месяцев назад

      @@WoahLookAtThatFreakIt was fine from a cinematography perspective, but not nearly as good as the originals. You had some weird shots for the sake of “different” in there. Like this lingering shot of the model car she was driving. Why do we need to see that? Or an up close shot of the main woman running like she’s on a deftones album cover. I don’t think the movie deserves to get a pass just because some of the camera work is fine. Some of it was awkward tbh.

  • @unhallowed45
    @unhallowed45 8 месяцев назад +1

    Beau was definitely set in a real place, not his mind. I think he had a moment of peace during the plat scene which sent him into a trance. As for the rest, he lives among actors that work for his mom and uses products that are all from his moms mega corporation; the penis monster was a fertility god which gave the mother god-like power over everything taking place in the film. It's the relationship with a malignant narcissist except the narcissist is in full control of their child's reality.

  • @trevorp8124
    @trevorp8124 Год назад

    "Every single horror movie that puts a young child character prominently in it is always too cowardly to let anything happen to them"
    1988 The Blob remake: "Am I a joke to you?"

  • @apollofell3925
    @apollofell3925 Год назад +4

    Adum's mini rant on horror movies refusing to kill child characters, while I'm stil thinking about how the director of Bueax is Afraid also directed Hereditary - a horror movie that kills a child character.

    • @skunkjo3195
      @skunkjo3195 Год назад +1

      Right??? And for me that was so shocking and amazing. Especially because going in, after the trailers, I was sure that kid was the main character. I was also sure it was a fakeout/ trip until they cut back to her head covered in flies. Iconic

    • @apollofell3925
      @apollofell3925 Год назад

      @@skunkjo3195 THE scene put me off horror movies forever, honestly. I don't need any more of that shit my life is horrific enough 😅

  • @Pencilskickass
    @Pencilskickass Год назад +1

    I saw Beau is Afraid in the theatre after a long day at work and fell asleep.

  • @justsumidiot.6426
    @justsumidiot.6426 Год назад +4

    glad to see you generally enjoyed Evil Dead Rise.
    And I kinda emphasize with you with the whole issue about how the little girl didn't even get hurt like at all.
    Like she might as well not have been in the movie at all.

    • @skunkjo3195
      @skunkjo3195 Год назад +2

      I was drunk af when watching this and kept whispering to my friend 'kill the kid! Kill the kid!'. To be fair, at the start when I saw the family had THREE kids, I was pissed bc if figured they wouldn't kill, like, anyone. I had rly low expectations going in, and it surprisingly slapped

    • @justsumidiot.6426
      @justsumidiot.6426 Год назад

      Evil Dead literally never fails.

  • @crunglemcbungley
    @crunglemcbungley Год назад +1

    Furries did Cheesegrater Horror better than Evil Dead, what a time to be alive

  • @thomasgarrow1599
    @thomasgarrow1599 Год назад +1

    I feel like Beau is a different movie in each of its 4 chapters. And while I love it for that reason I fully get why someone wouldn't. It's weird though because in a way I feel like all 4 of those chapters worked for me. I think one of the biggest reasons I didn't feel the film drag in it's 3rd chapter was cause the film WAS so chaotic in its first 2 that by then I needed something more relaxing and something to get me in the mind of Beau's character. Some people argue that his fantasy about a world where things are better isn't totally necessary to the forward momentum of the story and while I agree I think it is important to establish the side of Beau that is less constantly panicked and dreams for a better existence. And when he realizes that isn't achievable anymore, he gifts the statue he was gonna give to his mother to a women soon to have a child of her own in hopes they could have that life he couldn't.

  • @drakeurschel
    @drakeurschel Год назад +1

    I absolutely was along for the ride in Beau Is Afraid. I wish it was six hours long.

  • @quitpayload
    @quitpayload 7 месяцев назад

    Something interesting about the BlackBerry movie, Carl Yankowski, the guy who Cary Elwes plays, died literally the day after the movie was released

  • @Hellsinger89
    @Hellsinger89 Год назад +1

    Wouldn't it have been funny if the deadite mother opened her youngest daughter's Minecraft account and threw her avatar into lava and then cackled.

    • @gan5920
      @gan5920 Год назад +2

      I laughed out loud at this

  • @itsbreadbin
    @itsbreadbin Год назад +7

    Evil Dead Rise was great; I love that it didn't take itself seriously, and was super self aware. I had an absolute blast with it

    • @Lenn869
      @Lenn869 Год назад +3

      @cami's safe space nah i watched all the others and its the worst by far

  • @luxmar1
    @luxmar1 Год назад +5

    Adum is afraid (of Mario Movie)

  • @billysobolik
    @billysobolik Год назад +1

    I can speculate that it was originally called "Disappointment Blvd" because Aster knew many audiences would be unsatisfied with the film, so when its over, its a jokingly-meta way of Aster saying "well, what were you expecting?" It makes the payoff (or lack-there-of) make a lot more sense, if you think about it in that context. Still kinda glad they changed it though.

  • @AquaShibby3000
    @AquaShibby3000 Год назад

    I described Evil Dead Rise as "An exceptionally well made "ok" movie."

  • @CharlesOwens04
    @CharlesOwens04 Год назад +1

    I will say, they DID kill a kid and that kinda surprised me! Yeah, it was a side character and it didn't matter, but, hey! They killed a kid and threw his body across a hall!

  • @deadlypillows
    @deadlypillows Год назад +5

    Thank you for the Alex Jones "DESTROY THE CHILD" edit. Best laugh I've had in weeks