(2007)

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
A family's cost of living and the emotional cost of living with that family
rasecz29 April 2007
The Kirkland's are a well-to-do middle class family. We are introduced to each member by means of dollar values and costs: salaries, education, food, etc. The numbers are overlaid on the frame for each family member.

Preoccupations with money are voiced as the family prepares for dinner. Meanwhile, the ceiling is coming apart. Bits and pieces, a tail of dirt, dropping from above. More dollar costs are presented, this time to fix the ceiling.

The youngest boy, a teenager, seems fed up with what is going on around him. He sets to do something about it, fifteen minutes from now. Why they are the last fifteen will be clear if you see this so-so short.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
GOP allegory
charlytully19 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The Kirkland family personify one of America's more popular political parties (there's no accounting for some people's tastes). Big chunks of the ceiling keep falling on their heads all through this 18-minute short, but they pretty much ignore this--like perverse reverse Chicken Littles--because they cannot be bothered with such down-to-earth concerns as maintaining infrastructure. More important than evacuating their crumbling apartment is the vicious game of musical money they play; every family member is trying to weasel cash out of the others for their own pet concerns. Those family members who have not inherited gobs of gold on silver spoons apparently believe the only other way to earn money in this world is to steal it. (No one suggests a reasonable solution like collecting a family tax from the more affluent relatives, because members of the Kirkland's party have "taken the pledge.") This short has two endings. In the first, realistic, climax, the family's youngest and poorest member perishes (which anyone with a brain in their head saw coming from a mile away). But members of the Kirkland party live in a state of constant denial (there's actual You Tube footage of 25 or 30 of them passing a little girl by after she's fatally injured by a speeding limo). So director Antonio Campos brings his allegorical savaging of the GOP to a close by showing the more affluent, surviving Kirklands mass-hynotizing themselves to believe that young David Kirkland is still alive; that their crass obliviousness toward their posterity did not lop off the most promising branch of their future from its rotted roots.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed