PokeVideoPlayer v23.9-app.js-aug2025_
0143ab93_videojs8_1563605_YT_2d24ba15 licensed under gpl3-or-later
Views : 1,079
Genre: Entertainment
License: Standard YouTube License
Uploaded At 5 months ago ^^
warning: returnyoutubedislikes may not be accurate, this is just an estiment ehe :3
Rating : 4.965 (1/114 LTDR)
99.13% of the users lieked the video!!
0.87% of the users dislieked the video!!
User score: 98.69- Masterpiece Video
RYD date created : 2025-04-24T19:26:42.906881Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
I haven't seen this (yet!) but it's so fascinating how you describe the baddie β it immediately made me think of the Irish folk who actually 'sold out' to the Brits and effectively threw their own people under the bus during the Great Starvation, as well as just in general during the occupation. The disconnect and possible regret of choosing to abandon your culture, hand over your language and history and music and stories, so that the boot on your neck presses down a little less hard. An expulsion of the soul and life-blood, rather than a consumption of it β followed by the need to consume it once more to fill in that self-dug hole.
I'm looking forward to this movie π
20 | 0
I'm having to watch this with volume muted for reasons, and it's caused me to realize not only that you speak so clearly that I have never needed subtitles for your content before (auditory integration issues), but in fact you speak so clearly that this is the first time I've ever seen the automatic captioning make complete sense and not be full of glaring errors lol. Amazing. I'm often so fixated on pressuring creators to post edited captioning as an accessibility measure that it's never occurred to me that the automatic tech is in fact good enough that, despite usually sucking, it can be redeemed as a legitimately effective accessibility measure if people would just try a bit harder to speak reliably clearly XD
10 | 1
I agree the movie is terrific, and that one central scene is one of the best in any movie well worth experiencing in the theatre.
Possible spoilers in the discussion follows:
I'm not sure that I read the villain as necessarily having the same motivation/theming. I agree the Irish/British colonial oppression was definitely there, but I thought his motivation was using the music to transcend and see/experience his missing family through the magic of the gifted musician. I guess that I didn't read that as capitalism, and the Vampire was even acknowledging the common oppression and speaking against the klan with sharing the klan plan. But I can see you may be right as the way the vampire "family" shared memories and desires and knowledge could certainly be like the US "melting pot" view which certainly can be assimilating and suppressing cultures. And the ending mid-credit scene did give off some capitalism vibes in the costuming of the two visitors, and the opening scene with the Native American's being the ones to pursue the vampire and then give the warning about it certainly does increase the colonial symbolism.
4 | 1
@Bailey899
5 months ago
This film is the most fun I've had in a cinema in such a long time. Saw it on a whim without knowing anything about it - zero regrets and I can't wait to see it again with friends.
8 | 0