![]() ![]() Admittedly you don’t have to being a Hollywood insider to figure out what’s going on, as his movies don’t exactly become blockbuster hits, but there are few in the industry that would disagree that his creativity is a great thing for the art form and his vision deserves support. Obviously the positive to take away from this is the fact that Charlie Kaufman wound up finding excellent and suitable material to adapt, and he wound up turning that material into a phenomenal film… but I will take a second to get hung up on the awfulness that is the fact that Kaufman struggles to get movies made. You don’t even have to turn the first page before it’s clear why Charlie. I've been struggling to get stuff made and this seemed like a possibility. Those words appear twice in the opening paragraphs of Iain Reid’s 2016 novel I’m Thinking of Ending Things. 'Im Thinking of Ending Things' proves that Charlie Kaufmans vision as a director is. Meanwhile, Ill post some short reviews on the movie. First reviews have just come out but nothing yet on metacritic or rottentomatoes. Then it was the fact that it was very small, that it was contained, that it was four characters and three locations, it seemed like something I might be able to get financing for. Metacritic: 75/100 (15 critics) As with other movies, the scores are set to change as time passes. I was looking for something that I could possibly direct, and I read it and I really liked the dreaminess of it and the dream logic and the irrationality of it. But as the filmmaker explained, that was only half of the attraction: ![]() Starring: Jessie Buckley, Jesse Plemons, Toni Collette. What unfolds is a very special kind of existential nightmare that is very Kaufman-esque, and one can see how that would lure his attention. Nothing is as it seems when a woman experiencing misgivings about her new boyfriend joins him on a road trip to meet his parents at their remote farm.
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