Grave of the Fireflies/Awesome: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* More a Crowning Moment of Heartbreak, but it's a moment of Awesome tragedy when Setsuko dies, and [[Really Dead Montage|we see a vision of her playing outside the cave while a terribly sad song echoes from the house]] at the top of the hill, where people now return to their homes blissfully happy and everything goes back to normal, the forgotten children erased from history. And then we find out it's not over yet, there's still the cremation to go through.
* More a Crowning Moment of Heartbreak, but it's a moment of Awesome tragedy when Setsuko dies, and [[Really Dead Montage|we see a vision of her playing outside the cave while a terribly sad song echoes from the house]] at the top of the hill, where people now return to their homes blissfully happy and everything goes back to normal, the forgotten children erased from history. And then we find out it's not over yet, there's still the cremation to go through.
** What really drives that scene home is the juxtaposition of the situations. Here we have the brother and sister we've been with for the entire movie, who have lost ''everything'', and then we're shown a family who'd successfully fled the situation, come back home, and found ''everything intact''.
** What really drives that scene home is the juxtaposition of the situations. Here we have the brother and sister we've been with for the entire movie, who have lost ''everything'', and then we're shown a family who'd successfully fled the situation, come back home, and found ''everything intact''.
{{quote| '''Daughter''': Even the old record player's still here!
{{quote|'''Daughter''': Even the old record player's still here!
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Latest revision as of 07:37, 8 August 2014


  • More a Crowning Moment of Heartbreak, but it's a moment of Awesome tragedy when Setsuko dies, and we see a vision of her playing outside the cave while a terribly sad song echoes from the house at the top of the hill, where people now return to their homes blissfully happy and everything goes back to normal, the forgotten children erased from history. And then we find out it's not over yet, there's still the cremation to go through.
    • What really drives that scene home is the juxtaposition of the situations. Here we have the brother and sister we've been with for the entire movie, who have lost everything, and then we're shown a family who'd successfully fled the situation, come back home, and found everything intact.

Daughter: Even the old record player's still here!