subject: Watch We Are What We Are 2010 Movie Online For Free, Streaming, Megavideo, HD, HQ, Download We Are What We Are 2010 [print this page] Watch We Are What We Are 2010 Movie Online For Free, Streaming, Megavideo, HD, HQ, Download We Are What We Are 2010
Watch We Are What We Are 2010 Movie Online For Free, Streaming, Megavideo, HD, HQ, Download We Are What We Are 2010
I spoke with several people about this film after the Fantasia Film Festival screening and discovered that most of those who were less than enthusiastic about it all shared one thing in common... they did not "get" the ending. I do not want to give it entirely away, but one theme running through the film is the eldest son's inability to step up to the plate and become a leader. He finally does so at the end of the film, however, though - sadly - his mother and brother both misinterpret what it is he is doing. Perhaps it is the fault of thedirector that much of the audience seems to walk away with this same misinterpretation, but it needs to be noted that - in the final scene - the misunderstood boy's sister reveals a tiny piece of paper that her brother would have had to have handed to her while he was doing what he did. And the note on this piece of paper reveals his true intentions.
Watch We Are What We Are 2010 Movie Online For Free
We Are What We Are begins with a desperate, bedraggled tramp of a man, the very picture of Poverty, lurching through a Mexican outdoor mall, leering at lingerie-clad mannequins through a store's plate-glass window. The store's manager (owner?) chases Poverty away and polishes his window back to a shine, wiping away the drool. Poverty sees his reflection in the window as if for the first time, or the first time in years and the sight stuns him like an electric shock. Stumbling to the ground, spitting out black bile on the polished mall floor, Poverty falls and dies.
The film pauses for a second, as if to ask if there is room in this Mexico for sympathy, rescue or hope. Then two mall security guards arrive and efficiently carry the body away. Behind them a mall maintenance man arrives with a mop to wash away Poverty's bile. In this Mexico, the poor are so wretched that they can not even leave behind their stains.
We come to know this man through the family that he leaves behind. We come to understand that he was neither a good man to his community, nor a good husband to his wife, nor even a good father to his children. But if this man's family lived lives of quiet desperation and hopelessness while he was alive, with him dead they are doomed.
We become so invested in the survival of this family, that we begin to not just condone almost unspeakable acts of evil that this family plans to commit. we begin to cheer these atrocities and root for the family to succeed and get away with it.