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Reviews for "Los Dias Sin Dias"

Uhhhhhh...........

What............the animation was cool, and the message was well done, but, i didnt really follow the zombie turning good then into a winged girl and stuff........but hey, that just me...

Give a one-loin summary of your revue

The style was nice, the animation was smooth, the music was fitting.

The only thing left is the message...

I got mixed messages from this piece.

Obviously I don't understand straight away, and will have to go and think about it for a while, but until then, here's what I got:

First, the french quote. I don't know what the word "lyre" means. Google suggests that it means "Quadrant", but otherwise, this quote says "Stronger than alcohol (the French for alcohol is alcool, by the way), more vast than our (Quadrants?), fermenting the bitter stains of love!". I don't know what this means. It could be describing the feeling of dying, at the point where, just before you die, you suddenly love everyone. This seems to be what the movie is about. A boy or man is hospitalized with some kind of (terminal?) illness, and is having delusions. During these delusions, he falls into a sleep where he is a foul, ugly creature who slobbers and drools. He is visited by a girl who seems to love him unconditionally. She dances for him, ends his restlessness, and gives him a scarf (for warmth? comfort?).

She then goes to the window to make shadow puppets, as if she is making a symbol to the shadowy creatures in the yard to come inside. They do, and the boy/man's skin breaks and out of comes a butterfly/angel who is then stabbed by one of the shadowy creatures from the yard. He seems to be struggling with the scarf(?) before this happens.

He wakes up, and it turns out he had just been jabbed with a needle(?). The doctors turn out to be gentle and happy, and the last thing we see is the face of the girl, smiling.

Could this be indicative of the mental struggle that goes on in a person's mind before they reach the final stage before death (the final stage being acceptance, where the person loves everyone around him/her fully and accepts their fate and dies happily)?

The quote at the end seems to indicate this, or something like it, and yet, if the quote at the end applies, then it suggests that the doctors were, in fact, giving the boy/man a lethal injection (taking away his life and freeing him from Earth). It doesn't quite fit, does it (with the smiling)?

A response would be good.

Thanks for your time.

Scarydoll responds:

The point is that you are trying to analize the movie literally. Try to think of it as a metaphor. Or... well, nevermind ;)

ah

this was'nt to bad infact i liked it in a sort of liked it keep up the good work

Hmmmmmm, that was interesting!

At first this film was reminding me of a dark and sisnter view of Little Red Riding Hood, and as i continued to watch it i realized that the person on the bed was not evil and that she was hepling him and being there for a sick person. I think when they talked it should have has a silent movie subtitles thing going on but hey it's alright. I think it had a good message at the end and a good moral.

Jenavive19

Ok

This was an ok submission...i didn't like the animation of the all but the moral is very good, it seemed like u made a poem into a flash very good job but i gave u a score out of wut i saw...and the sound didn't come so clear fo rme