Fantastic! I especially like the fact that you are exploring the show, searching and scouring for clues the directors and writers have placed for us to pick up on subliminally, apparently without any or much inside secrets... Meaning you didn't work behind the scenes for the show. You kind of found all of this, I assume, yourself through watching each frame, probing the internet and putting a ton of time and thought into this so that someone like myself, who enjoyed the show, now enjoy it in a deeper level and when I re-watch it in a couple of years I'll know things to look for. Appreciate it.
Wonderful videos on this show. I loved how it was actually a bit slow in action because of the character focus. I'm always more curious about characters and their stories and personalities more than the actual event. It's interesting how Sharp Objects makes you forget that this is a contemporary tale, but yet the town looks like it's still stuck somewhere in the 40s/50s with the women's individuality stripped. I kept having to remind myself of that every time I saw an Apple laptop or smartphone. It was a wild ride.
I am glad I found your two videos about Sharp Objects. The way music is used in this show is remarkable. ' Sharp objects ' is spectacular. Great video. Keep up the good work. You earned a sub !
This is late, but thank you for clearing up the confusion about who helped Amma with the killing. Although it appeared to be the friends it wasn’t clear. As many videos as I’ve watched you’re the only one who’s verified it.
The replica ivory floor appears to contain many more teeth than 2 people could provide. I counted about 87. It’s hard to tell. We only see a portion of the floor. An average person has 32 teeth, including the wisdom teeth. Most of the teeth in the floor appear to be molars. But, even if the floor utilized all of the victims teeth & not just their morals, it would require at least 3 but likely four or more victims to complete. Seeing as the show was extremely intentional with everything it showed us, I am lead to believe that Amma &/or her mother may have additional, undiscovered victims. Perhaps they were marginalized people who wouldn’t be missed by the white town residents. Consumption by the family’s many pigs would’ve been a convenient a thorough method of disposal. Of course this is complete speculation. But it’s a chilling thing to think about
I didn’t notice this, but others noticed that the pig Amma was holding is the same one they were later chasing in the woods. I need to go back and watch that scene
This is so great! Thank you for your analysis. There were definitely clues I missed on this series. Your explanation & editing for the content shown, really is a joy to watch. I look forward to seeing more videos such as this. (Love the blue hair! lol) :)
I have not seen anyone mention the writing in Camille's back skin. She could not have done it and it must have been her mother as she is shown with her sharp fingernails against her back, but I wonder why I have not seen anyone talk about that clue in the explanation videos. Was it too obvious to mention? I suspected Amma and her friends early on.
Okay - sleep - who needs it! Make up - you don't. That was great! Your attention to the detail and the Analysis was superb! I have subscribed and clicked the bell! Thank you!
While I was watching the series, I thought Adora's husband was the killer. Maybe he knew about the poisoning of the daughters, but beyond that he was innocent. Then, I thought Adora had killed those two girls and pulled their teeth out. But, in the end it was *spoiler alert* Amma, if that's what the ending symbolizes... very messed up!
you have an amazing eye for detail, symbolism, and the english language. i think the mom in this show had a repressed desire to not be a mother, in this small town where she wasn't given any other choice. it mixed with her desire to be needed as a mother/caregiver to create her covertly murderous behavior... sharp objects was a great exploration of the dark side of womanhood and its prescribed and coerced roles. when the women in this town are given no choice but to adhere to narrow expectations of womanhood, they respond by becoming a dark version of that expectation, both embodying it and defying it in order to have power. ultimately, they turn on other women, even if that woman is their own self. they are both the arbiters and enforcers of this role and they choose other women as their victims. they also desire and value the love of other women most, even if it's a twisted perversion of love.
I just finished the series today and loved it! Stumbled upon your analysis and discovered things I hadn't noticed, thanks! May I ask where are you from? I cannot tell your accent, your English is excellent, maybe Italian?
Thank you! Some people believe it’s a way to hint at the cyclic parts of the show, as in story repeating itself. To me, it’s more a way to probably add to the claustrophobic feeling of living in that town.
@@Seriesable Yeah, I thought of the pigs in the farm. All caged up with those big fans all over them... Maybe it was a clue to let us know how people felt they were pigs caged up or something like that. I want to watch it again and see if it has to do with certain characters in particular.
Loved this analysis! ♥ The only thing I'd point out is that the baby Adora's holding while Camille is watching can't be Amma, since she's 13 years old and Camille is in her 30s.
Daniela Méndez For what it's worth, the baby is suppose to be Amma. We see in one episode that Camille is definitely much older than Amma but not old enough to be a mother to one of Ammas friends who rudely tells her in the jeep that she (Camille) reminds him of his mother. She asks for his mothers name in hopes of maybe knowing her from school but she says she doesn't and further says, it must be before my time.
@@lalam3877 Fair enough, but Camille is still in her 30s. She may not be old enough to be a mother to one of Amma's friends, but she could be 33-35 years old at least and that would mean she was 20-22 when Amma was born. For the numbers to add up, Camille needs to have been 17-18 back then, and I don't really think she is that young (not only because of her appearance, but because of Adora's, since she had her when she was pretty young as well). However, I'll own up to being a little bit biased in this, because the book clarifies that this baby Adora bites isn't in fact Amma, and they could have changed this detail for the series.
Came from the first part to say that once more, this is a very well-made video essay. The word on the car door is the most fascinating to me because even with my monitor brightness all the way up, I still can't quite see it. Is it a little bit to the left and below Amma's hand? I'll just assume that's where it is.
Half through the series the detective explains that human teeth are easier to pull out that the pig's teeth he was training on. It was possible for Amma to do this alone. There are female dentists pulling peoples teeth everyday, it's not that hard.
PART 1 that focuses on eps 1 to 5: ruclips.net/video/Hg7akaEYh9s/видео.html
Awesome, again. How you noticed those little signs is amazing!
I so agree. I even tried to look and didn't see them!
Fantastic! I especially like the fact that you are exploring the show, searching and scouring for clues the directors and writers have placed for us to pick up on subliminally, apparently without any or much inside secrets... Meaning you didn't work behind the scenes for the show. You kind of found all of this, I assume, yourself through watching each frame, probing the internet
and putting a ton of time and thought into this so that someone like myself, who enjoyed the show, now enjoy it in a deeper level and when I re-watch it in a couple of years I'll know things to look for. Appreciate it.
Wonderful videos on this show. I loved how it was actually a bit slow in action because of the character focus. I'm always more curious about characters and their stories and personalities more than the actual event. It's interesting how Sharp Objects makes you forget that this is a contemporary tale, but yet the town looks like it's still stuck somewhere in the 40s/50s with the women's individuality stripped. I kept having to remind myself of that every time I saw an Apple laptop or smartphone. It was a wild ride.
I am glad I found your two videos about Sharp Objects. The way music is used in this show is remarkable. ' Sharp objects ' is spectacular. Great video. Keep up the good work.
You earned a sub !
This is late, but thank you for clearing up the confusion about who helped Amma with the killing. Although it appeared to be the friends it wasn’t clear. As many videos as I’ve watched you’re the only one who’s verified it.
Yay part 2! I’m so curious as to what you think of the ending and the series as a whole. Once again, brilliant analysis. You’re so good!
The replica ivory floor appears to contain many more teeth than 2 people could provide. I counted about 87. It’s hard to tell. We only see a portion of the floor. An average person has 32 teeth, including the wisdom teeth. Most of the teeth in the floor appear to be molars. But, even if the floor utilized all of the victims teeth & not just their morals, it would require at least 3 but likely four or more victims to complete. Seeing as the show was extremely intentional with everything it showed us, I am lead to believe that Amma &/or her mother may have additional, undiscovered victims. Perhaps they were marginalized people who wouldn’t be missed by the white town residents. Consumption by the family’s many pigs would’ve been a convenient a thorough method of disposal. Of course this is complete speculation. But it’s a chilling thing to think about
In the book Amma ends up killing her new friend May, which they also hinted at in the show so that’s why I guess
I didn’t notice this, but others noticed that the pig Amma was holding is the same one they were later chasing in the woods. I need to go back and watch that scene
Maybe they were just twins :)
Excellent analysis. Thank-you for clearing up some questions that I had!
Great wrap up. Just finished the series. I was shook when I saw the tooth.
Great break down. I loved this show and you explained it so perfectly.
This is so great! Thank you for your analysis. There were definitely clues I missed on this series. Your explanation & editing for the content shown, really is a joy to watch. I look forward to seeing more videos such as this. (Love the blue hair! lol) :)
thank you for making these videos! i never would have noticed any of these things
has no one noticed how in the scene where they find natalie's body john appears running in the background?? please explain
Absolutely incredible! I'd have never noticed all the words and especially the lyrics! Thank you so much!
I looove your videos. Thank you for taking the time to make them. ♡
depth analysis is on another level.
I have not seen anyone mention the writing in Camille's back skin. She could not have done it and it must have been her mother as she is shown with her sharp fingernails against her back, but I wonder why I have not seen anyone talk about that clue in the explanation videos. Was it too obvious to mention? I suspected Amma and her friends early on.
Okay - sleep - who needs it! Make up - you don't. That was great! Your attention to the detail and the Analysis was superb! I have subscribed and clicked the bell! Thank you!
Great analysis. Great video.
Love your videos!
While I was watching the series, I thought Adora's husband was the killer. Maybe he knew about the poisoning of the daughters, but beyond that he was innocent. Then, I thought Adora had killed those two girls and pulled their teeth out. But, in the end it was *spoiler alert* Amma, if that's what the ending symbolizes... very messed up!
I LOVE you and your videos so much ohmygod
What about the mother pulling out her eyelashes?
you have an amazing eye for detail, symbolism, and the english language. i think the mom in this show had a repressed desire to not be a mother, in this small town where she wasn't given any other choice. it mixed with her desire to be needed as a mother/caregiver to create her covertly murderous behavior... sharp objects was a great exploration of the dark side of womanhood and its prescribed and coerced roles. when the women in this town are given no choice but to adhere to narrow expectations of womanhood, they respond by becoming a dark version of that expectation, both embodying it and defying it in order to have power. ultimately, they turn on other women, even if that woman is their own self. they are both the arbiters and enforcers of this role and they choose other women as their victims. they also desire and value the love of other women most, even if it's a twisted perversion of love.
This is a really great take. This comment deserves more likes.
I just finished the series today and loved it! Stumbled upon your analysis and discovered things I hadn't noticed, thanks! May I ask where are you from? I cannot tell your accent, your English is excellent, maybe Italian?
yes!! so happy about any fellow female analysist I find. great work!!
A very helpful analysis.
Loved the way you explained everything! Watched both videos and subscribed! Btw, did you find a meaning for the fans through out the series?
Thank you! Some people believe it’s a way to hint at the cyclic parts of the show, as in story repeating itself. To me, it’s more a way to probably add to the claustrophobic feeling of living in that town.
@@Seriesable Yeah, I thought of the pigs in the farm. All caged up with those big fans all over them... Maybe it was a clue to let us know how people felt they were pigs caged up or something like that. I want to watch it again and see if it has to do with certain characters in particular.
Loved this analysis! ♥ The only thing I'd point out is that the baby Adora's holding while Camille is watching can't be Amma, since she's 13 years old and Camille is in her 30s.
Daniela Méndez For what it's worth, the baby is suppose to be Amma. We see in one episode that Camille is definitely much older than Amma but not old enough to be a mother to one of Ammas friends who rudely tells her in the jeep that she (Camille) reminds him of his mother. She asks for his mothers name in hopes of maybe knowing her from school but she says she doesn't and further says, it must be before my time.
@@lalam3877 Fair enough, but Camille is still in her 30s. She may not be old enough to be a mother to one of Amma's friends, but she could be 33-35 years old at least and that would mean she was 20-22 when Amma was born. For the numbers to add up, Camille needs to have been 17-18 back then, and I don't really think she is that young (not only because of her appearance, but because of Adora's, since she had her when she was pretty young as well).
However, I'll own up to being a little bit biased in this, because the book clarifies that this baby Adora bites isn't in fact Amma, and they could have changed this detail for the series.
Came from the first part to say that once more, this is a very well-made video essay. The word on the car door is the most fascinating to me because even with my monitor brightness all the way up, I still can't quite see it. Is it a little bit to the left and below Amma's hand? I'll just assume that's where it is.
Hearing this from a woman’s perspective was insightful
Why did Camille start taking the poisonous elixir?
Amazing
sksksskskkssk I FUCKING LOVE YOUR ANALYSIS
I see what you did there. You swapped “Smart Objects” in your conclusion.
The police sais that it should have been a man who took the teeths out. How can Amma did it alone?
Half through the series the detective explains that human teeth are easier to pull out that the pig's teeth he was training on. It was possible for Amma to do this alone. There are female dentists pulling peoples teeth everyday, it's not that hard.