The news covets every detail of the disaster for the viewers at home at dinnertime, invading their comfort and tranquility. It counter poses yet compliments the memorial flowers (that look plastic and hence the reverse of sympathetic and indeed hollow) left for Meryls recently deceased father. There are also condolence cards. However, there is a contrast between the deathly peacefulness of Meryls mums house where the television news is spewing forth the casualty count and the accident scene.
Funeral flowers for her father decorate the table beside the television set that is also showing a train accident scene on the TV news similar to the NSW Granville Disaster. The rail disaster that is appearing on Meryls parents (now only her widowed mothers) home television set is traumatic. The screen buzzes blue with radiant distress from the disaster zone at Arno Hill where a train has derailed and collapsed a tunnel, trapping passengers. This is similar to the Granville Disaster, NSW
Meryl glimpses in her mind sharks and babies starving while Nick is gripped with his own mortality. Andy lingers on suicidal acts at the railway tracks. Each seeks to extinguish their own fears and make it through to Monday successfully. Yet simultaneously each is wracked with terrors and phobias that make it difficult to sustain and grow new relationships. Only Andys girlfriend with her new baby seems fulfilled in the film.
The lives of the characters in Sarah Watts Look Both Ways (2005) converge and entwine over a hot, scorching weekend while some wait with trepidation for heavy sentences to fall upon them. Nick fears a cancerous diagnosis from his doctor. Meryl may lose her job if she does not make her artistic deadline (a symbol of death a theme recurrent in the film). Andy must make decisions about his future with his family. Combined with these hefty decisions are fears both real and false Come visit
ha hell no
Grantus619 2 years ago
ur kidding right?
lopheaded1192 2 years ago
The news covets every detail of the disaster for the viewers at home at dinnertime, invading their comfort and tranquility. It counter poses yet compliments the memorial flowers (that look plastic and hence the reverse of sympathetic and indeed hollow) left for Meryls recently deceased father. There are also condolence cards. However, there is a contrast between the deathly peacefulness of Meryls mums house where the television news is spewing forth the casualty count and the accident scene.
a1tuitionmedia 2 years ago
Funeral flowers for her father decorate the table beside the television set that is also showing a train accident scene on the TV news similar to the NSW Granville Disaster. The rail disaster that is appearing on Meryls parents (now only her widowed mothers) home television set is traumatic. The screen buzzes blue with radiant distress from the disaster zone at Arno Hill where a train has derailed and collapsed a tunnel, trapping passengers. This is similar to the Granville Disaster, NSW
a1tuitionmedia 2 years ago
Meryl glimpses in her mind sharks and babies starving while Nick is gripped with his own mortality. Andy lingers on suicidal acts at the railway tracks. Each seeks to extinguish their own fears and make it through to Monday successfully. Yet simultaneously each is wracked with terrors and phobias that make it difficult to sustain and grow new relationships. Only Andys girlfriend with her new baby seems fulfilled in the film.
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a1tuitionmedia 2 years ago
The lives of the characters in Sarah Watts Look Both Ways (2005) converge and entwine over a hot, scorching weekend while some wait with trepidation for heavy sentences to fall upon them. Nick fears a cancerous diagnosis from his doctor. Meryl may lose her job if she does not make her artistic deadline (a symbol of death a theme recurrent in the film). Andy must make decisions about his future with his family. Combined with these hefty decisions are fears both real and false Come visit
a1tuitionmedia 2 years ago
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a1tuitionmedia 2 years ago
shocking film. Andy saved the horrible reviews
Grantus619 2 years ago
yeah so good. but he actually has a good point about ''all the small minded shit''
cschultink 2 years ago