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What would you do if you knew for sure that the world is about to end?
Author and director Lars of trier Explore that idea in his Sci-Fi drama in 2011 MelancholiaA film that was perhaps a little too grim to ever be popular at the box office.
And yet Melancholia Stay with you like a few movies that make it, and the science fiction attitude on it is less important than the feelings and emotions of its characters.
That is why Watch with us shares three reasons to watch Melancholia before he left Netflix Later this week.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ty80gjfkdle
Sci-fi films have conditioned audiences to expect a miraculous healing that saves the earth before everyone on the planet dies. Melancholia Isn’t that kind of film. This story is not about avoiding the end of the world – it’s about the way the characters face the end when there is no other option. The earth is destined, and there is nothing that can change that.
In the film, Melancholia is the name given to a fraudulent planet that becomes dangerously close to the earth. Once the two planets collide, everyone on earth will die in an instant. That’s the kind of bad news that the majority of the population can’t take. The focus of the film depends on a few individuals, most especially Kirsten Dunst‘s Justine.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqblcp9enk8
The first part of the film acts as a straight drama, like Justine’s marriage to Michael (Alexander Skarsgård) brings his world crashing around her even before anyone knows about their upcoming destiny. The pure despair that Dunst conveys in every movement and justine gesture is amazing. She does not have to voice what she feels when she is written on her face.
When the end of the world is close, Justine is more than a little unjust. But so do everyone else around it. The interesting thing about Justine and her sister, Claire (Charlotte Gainsbourg), is the way they face the end. Justine’s response is assured that Claire does not have. Husband Claire, John (Kiefer Sutherland), responds so that this crisis can be survived. The sisters know otherwise, and that’s what makes them so compelling.
Kirsten Dunst, Cameron Spurr, Charlotte Gainsbourg in Melancholia
Christian Geisnaes. © Magnolia Films/courtesy of the Everett CollectionA mistake would be to ruin an end Melancholia In front of time, though the film never pretends to have a happy ending. So while we don’t repeat the specifics, it’s enough to know that Justine and Claire face the end together. There is something beautiful and tragic about the way the sisters have each other alone, and even that is not sufficient.
This is not the kind of film that fills spectators with hope, but it is Stimulates the mind and is memorable in ways that many films never achieve. Having said that, you may wish to avoid Melancholia If you feel depressed. This film will only inflate those emotions.
Melancholia streaming on Netflix Until August 24.