- Joined
- Aug 28, 2023
I have also watched the movie and can give my thoughts in regards to both people that have seen the Kane Pixels series and know of the worldbuilding, and the general normie audience.
For those who have no idea of the lore that Kane has spent over 4 years establishing, it's a solid thriller with a resolution that that gives a conclusive "answer" to what the backrooms are. It gives a base to build off of if you only ever knew it through memes or the original context of the image, and satisfies the the most surface level analysis and you can leave your seat thinking, "huh, so that's what it is, but what was all that containment unit stuff? time to write a small novel as to my interpretation."
For those who have no idea of the lore that Kane has spent over 4 years establishing, it's a solid thriller with a resolution that that gives a conclusive "answer" to what the backrooms are. It gives a base to build off of if you only ever knew it through memes or the original context of the image, and satisfies the the most surface level analysis and you can leave your seat thinking, "huh, so that's what it is, but what was all that containment unit stuff? time to write a small novel as to my interpretation."
I'm not going to recap a 3 hour 21 minute Wendigoon vid, so if you care deeply about established lore watch this instead.
How Kane handled the bridge between those in the know and those without prior knowledge is handled very well, almost to the detriment of the casual audience since the movie is RIFE with allegories and motifs. The ocean, the sounds of a ship bracing against the wave, windchimes, the sun in splendour, the ship steering wheels. is all present. Hell, even the name and premise of the main character is in your face, but it'll take a "reputed reviewer" to make the connection as opposed to some train enthusiast who already laid it out years prior.
My only gripe is the approach to Still Life. No, not the soundtrack from the 2nd Kane Pixels channel, that's a iykyk aspect of the film which is ever present but shifted up or down during scenes. I'm talking about the theory of the Complex attempting to create human life from what it gathered.
Be in mind since this is meant for the big screen, there is no mention or allusion to the mold found in the Complex. In fact, it is absent. This is a good take for a casual audience since an endless Complex shouldn't have a singular "big bad." But with the exclusion of the mold factor, the movie heavily relies on the Still Life. And Still Life we do see.
We see it in a bombshell way when Clark investigates the Christmas tree room during a found-footage segment, which was executed in the way of a KanePixels climax. Peak.
This loses its steam as when we focus on the reunion of the main stars. Not to say it wasn't a point of tension and revelation, but for a series to have the aggressor briefly visible or flash on cam to then be background props is underwhelming. But as I reflect it only leads to theory crafting spergs as to why they act and react as they do.
As expected for a 1:50hr runtime A24 movie that leaves off in a "conclusive" way. I say "conclusive" because there's no real conclusion, the backrooms is a concept, not a complete story. But Kane is able to put a bow on it to leave casual audiences satisfied, and lore-knowers making a trillion youtube videos. It's not shallow, but at the same time would have rewatchers feast on details (THRONE ROOM HINT HINT).
It leaves off on Kane's interpretation of the backrooms, and if you're still interested after reading my sperging, it's worth it.
My only gripe is the approach to Still Life. No, not the soundtrack from the 2nd Kane Pixels channel, that's a iykyk aspect of the film which is ever present but shifted up or down during scenes. I'm talking about the theory of the Complex attempting to create human life from what it gathered.
Be in mind since this is meant for the big screen, there is no mention or allusion to the mold found in the Complex. In fact, it is absent. This is a good take for a casual audience since an endless Complex shouldn't have a singular "big bad." But with the exclusion of the mold factor, the movie heavily relies on the Still Life. And Still Life we do see.
We see it in a bombshell way when Clark investigates the Christmas tree room during a found-footage segment, which was executed in the way of a KanePixels climax. Peak.
This loses its steam as when we focus on the reunion of the main stars. Not to say it wasn't a point of tension and revelation, but for a series to have the aggressor briefly visible or flash on cam to then be background props is underwhelming. But as I reflect it only leads to theory crafting spergs as to why they act and react as they do.
As expected for a 1:50hr runtime A24 movie that leaves off in a "conclusive" way. I say "conclusive" because there's no real conclusion, the backrooms is a concept, not a complete story. But Kane is able to put a bow on it to leave casual audiences satisfied, and lore-knowers making a trillion youtube videos. It's not shallow, but at the same time would have rewatchers feast on details (THRONE ROOM HINT HINT).
It leaves off on Kane's interpretation of the backrooms, and if you're still interested after reading my sperging, it's worth it.