Kaufman gleefully obliterates the banality of small talk pleasantries exchanged around the dinner table turn into a farcical play about the inanity of human interaction. Nothing, quite literally, makes any sense. A dog appears and disappears just as quickly. Jake's parents rapidly age and de-age from scene to scene. Early on, Jake hears the young woman - that's how Buckley's character is identified in the credits, although in the movie she's alternately known as Lucy and Louisa - talking to herself. She's been dating Jake (Jesse Plemons) for about six weeks and they're off to meet his parents (Toni Collette and David Thewlis) at his family's farmhouse, but they're not staying long, because she's got to get home and there's a blizzard on its way.īlips point out glitches in the matrix, or that everything is not in its right place. Here, Kaufman's focus is a young woman (Jessie Buckley) who early on informs us, in voiceover, that she's thinking of ending things. But its pathways only lead to more pathways, and it eventually breaks down on the side of the road, its tail lights flashing into the void. It's a surreal dreamscape where time folds in on itself, identity is fluid and everyone is experiencing some level of existential crisis. "I'm Thinking of Ending Things" lands somewhere in the middle. He's been exploring the outer edges of the human condition for more than two decades, with varying degrees of success "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" is as emotionally raw and relatable as "Synecdoche, New York" is impenetrable. I'm Thinking of Ending Things is one of the few films more suited to a small screen release instead of a theatrical one.Both are likely what writer-director Charlie Kaufman set out to achieve. Other than that this film could get nominations for its sound editing, soundtrack, cinematography, production design and screenplay. Jessie Buckley, David Thewlis and Toni Collette are bound to be front runners in the acting category this awards season. Without spoiling the ending, I feel the film shows 2 different ways the life could have ended up for Jake. Jessie Buckley and Jesse Plemons look like they are caught in a debate between existentialism and nihilism throughout the film. The ice cream scene in Tulsey Town captures the very nature of hedonism present in humans so beautifully, its the best scene of the film. The film from my point of view explores the themes nihilism, essentialism and hedonism in multiple scenes. The production design essentially makes is question the timeline of the film. The score is so similar to what we hear in horrors and the production design and makeup is top notch. The movie is set in the midst of a snowstorm giving the creepy mood. The film walks towards that path for the first hour of the film until Kaufman starts to mess with our brains by exploring age, time and ambition in a way most of us don't see. The premise of the movie is about a young woman (Jessie Buckley) who thinks about ending her relationship with her boyfriend Jake (Jesse Plemons). Jessie Buckley and Jesse Plemons are exceptional as the film's lead actors but it was the supporting actors David Thewlis and Toni Collette who were at the top of their game. The scenes are long and dialogue heavy throughout the film. After the first act, much of the film is ambiguous and dream like. Like all of Kaufman's work I'm Thinking of Ending Things simply doesn't tell its viewer what's actually happening, it offers open interpretations to each.
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