Review of A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence (2014) by Joe H — 02 Jan 2016
*MILD-TO-NONEXISTENT SPOILERS: Describes a couple of the stories, but.
In the type of depth that you'd expect from a traditional newspaper.
Review*.
A man half-heartedly looks at a series of exhibits in a museum before.
Pausing with mild interest at a pigeon on a branch: it's dead,.
Obviously. In the distance is a skeleton of a dinosaur, ancestor to the.
Modern bird. So begins this extraordinarily dry, Swedish existentialist.
Comedy - a collection of vignettes that poke fun at the absurdity of.
The human condition. In an early scene, a man lies dead on the floor of.
A cafeteria that looks like it's located in an airport. Unfortunately,.
The EMT reports, the man cannot be revived. But this creates a dilemma.
Because, as the cashier explains to the authorities, the man had just.
Paid for a beer and a shrimp sandwich. Yes, the authorities agree, it.
Would be unethical to charge people for a meal that has already been.
Paid for. And so the cashier calls out to the gawking onlookers: "Would.
Anyone like a shrimp sandwich? Or a beer? It's free." I don't think I'm.
Ruining anything when I say that arguably the film's crescendo is a.
Debate among people standing at a bus stop over what day of the week it.
Is. The stories are told with extreme irreverence, and at times they.
Tread into the surreal. They are so thematically similar that the work.
Feels more like a feature-length film than a series of shorts. This.
Film is an example of the sum being greater than the whole of its.
Parts. Told individually, the stories are funny, but taken together,.
They create a film that is thought-provoking and strangely moving.
This review of A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence (2014) was written by Joe H on 02 Jan 2016.
A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence has generally received positive reviews.
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