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User Comments for: The Wonder

AdamMorgan says...
one year ago
There are so many things that I loved about this movie. I loved how clean the whole setup is - it only took about twenty minutes to give the viewer an excellent glimpse into where the movie was going and what the main conflicts are. While the girl was at the center of the story the movie really had nothing to do with the girl. The acting by everyone in the movie is absolutely top notch, especially Florence Pugh (she very much reminds me of a young Kate Winslet). Once the story was set up I was extremely curious as to how they were going to wrap it up - the resolution was amazing and did not disappoint.

I do have one last note on this movie. I am a man that embraces science and discounts religion. On the surface it seems as though this movie be a movie about science vs. religion but I think the exchange between the nurse and the nun at the end of the movie shows that the issue was not necessarily religion but fanaticism.

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Reply by Erebos
one year ago
@adammorgan <br /> &gt;the issue was not necessarily religion but fanaticism.<br /> <br /> I don't think so. It seemed to me that the issue is the defining element of all Abrahamic religions, which is the oppressive sense of shame/guilt, and the lengths people (the father, the mother, the doctor and the rest of the committee) go to in order to cope with the cognitive dissonance.<br /> <br /> If you've watched Sebastián Lelio's previous film _Disobedience_ (2017), you should be able to see a pattern emerging.
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Reply by amasulem
5 months ago
@adammorgan @adammorgan <br /> In the end the film was about transformation, and with it self-forgiveness. Shedding the skin to fly like a bird outside the cage, where there was only a rigid conformity. Dealing with trauma can leave one trapped within a mindset. The constant reference to ins and outs throughout the film, even with the lead-in and out revealing of the interior sets. One does not necessarily need the obsession to be a rigid interpretation of revelation of religion. It could be any belief that helps disguise the pain and serve as a crutch to think oneself unworthy, of life, of care, and of value. Sometimes, for a time, they are needed, but it the end a healthy mind abandons them and sees beyond construction (cage, fake sets) to the recognition that there is an outside, a place to look with an eagle's eye over your own trauma and see it from a view that enables you to forgive yourself, and move on. <br /> <br /> There is the issue of a kind of resurrection as a trope, and obtaining access to heaven, and in this film they were opposed in a very satisfactory manner in creating the arena for the transformation, without harming the belief system entirely. This was really well done. So, even if we can suppose some raised religious fervour among most of the villagers, we must equally recognise a doctor who is convinced that some as yet unexplained scientific phenomenon is responsible. Therefore both have their obsessions. Some X in which to look for a surface that they can bring them comfort. The 'out' of it in this sense, while they miss the 'in'. So in short a psychological release from Egyptian bondage to use religious terminology. A conversion: a renewing of the mind.<br /> <br /> The emigration scene at the end with the meal on-set and then the pan to the actress who played the sister looking at the viewer felt very intrusive., like a challenge. Reminded me that when we move away either briefly or permanently we in fact become free to be different. To reinvent ourselves.
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