OleBoiii
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2019
- Messages
- 6,021
What did you make of Burning? It has been bugging me since I saw it, feel like I missed something. Not sure whether I just wasn't paying close enough attention or if it was actually quite confusing.
My interpretation:
There are multiple themes, but the main theme is wealth inequality. However, even if the movie depicts wealth inequality as unjust, the "villain" is actually not a villain beyond being filthy rich. We see the story through the eyes of the protagonist who's gotten quite mad from the unfairness of the system. He sees things and patterns that aren't actually there and constructs a reality where the wealthy "villain" is a serial killer. A large part of the movie is trying to determine what's actually real and what just happens in the protagonist's imagination.
I think the very last scene gives us the best clue of this. When the villain arrives at the meeting spot we finally(?) get to see both the protagonist and the villain through a truly objective lens. The camera angle changes in a way that makes us seem further away than usual. We then see that the villain has a completely different demeanour than he normally has. He's not cocky or particularly suave at all. There's no threatening undertone. He doesn't move with confidence. And he genuinely seems concerned for the missing girl. If he was truly the killer as we're lead to believe, then it goes completely against his character to play dumb. That is not at all the character the protagonist has interacted with up until that point.
And then he's brutally stabbed by the protagonist, who doesn't even say a word. His madness has finally lead him to this.
I think the very last scene gives us the best clue of this. When the villain arrives at the meeting spot we finally(?) get to see both the protagonist and the villain through a truly objective lens. The camera angle changes in a way that makes us seem further away than usual. We then see that the villain has a completely different demeanour than he normally has. He's not cocky or particularly suave at all. There's no threatening undertone. He doesn't move with confidence. And he genuinely seems concerned for the missing girl. If he was truly the killer as we're lead to believe, then it goes completely against his character to play dumb. That is not at all the character the protagonist has interacted with up until that point.
And then he's brutally stabbed by the protagonist, who doesn't even say a word. His madness has finally lead him to this.