I love magazines
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Love Begins
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Monterey Bay Aquarium
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Origami Around

PR's Tumblrdome

JVL

Kiana Khansmith
No title available

Janaina Medeiros
macklin celebrini has autism
almost home

JBB: An Artblog!

Andulka
AnasAbdin

tannertan36
hello vonnie
Peter Solarz
seen from United States
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seen from Morocco
seen from Türkiye
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@loulis101
I love magazines
This film is about a boy who suffers from the belief that one's entire life is a movie. The Truman Show is a good example of this: the notion that one's entire life is so perfect, so banal, repetitious and ordinary, that it must be scripted-- it cannot possibly be real. So this boy, Archie, records as much of his life as he possibly can on video, and edits it together in his room.
The problem is, no matter how much of his life he makes into a movie, it still feels meaningless. So he announces in his high school film class that he will make a movie in which he kills himself. That will be the plot and the grand finale.
His entire neighborhood starts gossiping about him, and his life changes enormously. This is when his real movie-making starts. Suicide is always lurking near him, and the entire movie is a play on various questions of suicide: when we kill ourselves, what are we doing? Is every death a 'suicide' because of the necessarily unsafe ways we live our lives? Is suicide an act of freedom and defiance, or of conformity and weakness-- or neither?
Some great cameos from unexpected actors add to the film a lot.
This is one of those rare films that covers the entire emotional spectrum, and does so effortlessly. It is as hilarious as it is tragic, as fragmented as it is thorough.