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What is your favourite Suicide related movie?
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Definitely from niptuck when the wife takes pills and put on the bag .would definitely marry a doctor to get access to this stuff at the ease of my bed as she did .we have to dig in to much to die for gods sake
Doctor: -"You chased a bottle of aspirin with a bottle of vodka"!! Susanna: -"I had a headache".
(...) "In 69: The Wild ones went to Woodstock; The Unlucky ones went to War; But if you didn't know where you were going… They sent you to 'Claymore'".
I'm actually a weirdo who liked TLJ, but I agree. Rogue One had no major problems. TLJ needed to 1) completely rework or replace the casino subplot and 2) tweak the Holdo storyline to be more plausible.
What do you think of Solo? IMO, the supporting cast was excellent, but the story was just OK. I actually thought the actor did a great job in his portrayal, but what he had to work with was too Disney-fied for Han Solo.
I completely agree with "The Hours" (Nicole Kidman's portrayal of Virginia Woolf is amazing) and "Melancholia". One I didn't see mentioned is "Goodbye Solo." Highly recommended. Make sure you have your kleenex box nearby!
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g0921, tryingtoescape and exhausteduntreatable
Kind of hokey, probably dated, but I found it moving:
This one is kind of over the top (Suicide Circle), the opening scene is a bunch of Japanese school girls jumping in front of a train. The video clip also contains spoilers. (The full movie used to be up on YouTube, but was removed, alas.)
Thank you for mentioning Before I Disappear. The full length film is definitely flawed, but special nonetheless. The short film it's based on, Curfew (by the same director), is much better imo, but I appreciate both
Oslo 31 aout / Oslo, August 31st by Joachim Trier (Thelma of him is good too but not at this level)
An elephant sitting still by Hu Bo (It's not about suicide but there is suicide in and Hu bo the Director suicide after this. It's a long movie But i thought it's was very sensitive's one)
I'm going to cheat a bit and go for a TV show called The Good Place.
(SPOILER WARNING)
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.
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The series is about a sort of secular afterlife, and it ends with the main characters deciding to let people leave it once and for all- a final end to existence. Pivotally, nobody has to leave unless they're ready, and it's treated as completely within their rights. When people announce that they're leaving, the worst that they get is an 'Are you sure?' or 'I'll miss you'. I wish life worked this way.
I forgot to mention, there's also the episode of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia called 'Mac Kills His Dad'. The b-plot of the episode sees the disreputable Bill Ponderosa cheerfully announce that he's going to drink himself to death the way someone else might celebrate a promotion. "Yeah, I botched it- life, y'know? Old B.P. had a good run.' The whole thing is just so hilariously dark- I've seen suicide played for laughs, but the suicidal person looking forward to it this way is something special.
"Veronika Decides to Die" -- a novel infused with truth based on the real life experiences of its author, Paulo Coelho. A movie with the same title was made but it is such absolute shite when compared to the book that I could only really recommend reading the book. However, here's a link to the movie trailer, fwiw:
"Veronika Decides to Die" -- a novel infused with truth based on the real life experiences of its author, Paulo Coelho. A movie with the same title was made but it is such absolute shite when compared to the book that I could only really recommend reading the book. However, here a link to the movie trailer, fwiw:
The Sunset Limited, You Don't Know Jack, The Sea Inside, Christine, a number of Bergman films but particularly Winter Light, Through a Glass Darkly, and Persona, First Reformed, Harold and Maude, The Man who Sleeps.
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