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The Art of The Peanut Butter Falcon

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Manage episode 248289925 series 2564675
Content provided by John Higgins. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by John Higgins or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The Peanut Butter Falcon is an exquisite piece of literary craft and in this video I explore some of the symbolism of the film.
Support the Channel: https://www.patreon.com/thebibleisart
Website: https://www.thebibleisart.com
Email: thisdivineart@gmail.com
Twitter: @johnbhiggins
| Transcription |
The Peanut Butter Falcon is a work of the highest literary and dramatic skill. But because it has been described by many critics as a “feel good movie” I worry that its depth, symbolism, careful attention to detail, surgical development of themes and images might be lost. So in praise of this great film, let’s look at the art of the Peanut Butter Falcon.
Peanut Butter Falcon is a story about Zak, Tyler and Eleanor. Zak is a 22 year old with Down Syndrome who wants to escape his retirement home where has lived since his family abandoned him and to go to a professional wrestling training camp. Tyler, also a young man, fisherman, and thief has a hard time keeping down jobs because he lost his brother one night when he fell asleep at the wheel. After setting fire to a rival’s fisherman's gear, Tyler sets on the road to Florida where he runs into Zak whom Tyler agrees to take to the wrestling school in Florida.
Eleanor works at the retirement home where Zak lives and will chase after after him before joining their journey
Like any good journey narrative, this external journey mirrors the internal journey, the transformation of persons and relationships.
Zak and Tyler as a pair are contrasting as well as complementary, similar and different. That is, they have multiple needs, multiple things that need transformation and one of them they share and one is different.
They’re similar in that they have both lost family and need a new one. But they are different in the following ways. Tyler is self-sufficient/independent and able-bodied, Zak is dependent and has a physical difficulty. And as they go through their journey both their similar needs and different difficulties will be transformed. Tyler’s journey will be a journey out of self-sufficiency and selfishness while Zak’s will be a journey out of his self-perception of deformity, disabled. And they will find this as they create a new family
The first two scenes of the movie open with solitary characters. A shot of Zak and then a shot of Tyler, symbolically communicating their lack of family, their loneliness. This will symbolically change by the end of the movie where the last frame will be Zak, Tyler, and Eleanor, a worker at the retirement home who will run away with them. But let’s not jump too quickly to the end.
When the story begins Tyler is stealing crabs from other fishermans’ traps. The other fisherman confront him, beat him up, and then Tyler sets fire to their equipment. The fisherman see the fire and start to chase after Tyler. Tyler escapes in a boat that unbeknownst to him, Zak hid himself in, looking for anyway to get to his wrestling school.
After some convincing, Tyler finally agrees to drop Zak off at the school on his way to Florida. Notice, Tyler begins thinking two false assumptions: first, that they are on different journeys and second, that he is leading Zak.
The first rule that Tyler establishes is that Zak cannot slow him down. So between geographically leading them and physically being faster, Tyler assumes that he is the independent, strong one, leading a physically slow, Down Syndrome boy down south.
But Tyler doesn’t realize that leading the physical journey pales in comparison to the importance of the internal journey of transformation and in that journey he is the follower.
This inversion of the leader follower...
  continue reading

80 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 248289925 series 2564675
Content provided by John Higgins. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by John Higgins or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The Peanut Butter Falcon is an exquisite piece of literary craft and in this video I explore some of the symbolism of the film.
Support the Channel: https://www.patreon.com/thebibleisart
Website: https://www.thebibleisart.com
Email: thisdivineart@gmail.com
Twitter: @johnbhiggins
| Transcription |
The Peanut Butter Falcon is a work of the highest literary and dramatic skill. But because it has been described by many critics as a “feel good movie” I worry that its depth, symbolism, careful attention to detail, surgical development of themes and images might be lost. So in praise of this great film, let’s look at the art of the Peanut Butter Falcon.
Peanut Butter Falcon is a story about Zak, Tyler and Eleanor. Zak is a 22 year old with Down Syndrome who wants to escape his retirement home where has lived since his family abandoned him and to go to a professional wrestling training camp. Tyler, also a young man, fisherman, and thief has a hard time keeping down jobs because he lost his brother one night when he fell asleep at the wheel. After setting fire to a rival’s fisherman's gear, Tyler sets on the road to Florida where he runs into Zak whom Tyler agrees to take to the wrestling school in Florida.
Eleanor works at the retirement home where Zak lives and will chase after after him before joining their journey
Like any good journey narrative, this external journey mirrors the internal journey, the transformation of persons and relationships.
Zak and Tyler as a pair are contrasting as well as complementary, similar and different. That is, they have multiple needs, multiple things that need transformation and one of them they share and one is different.
They’re similar in that they have both lost family and need a new one. But they are different in the following ways. Tyler is self-sufficient/independent and able-bodied, Zak is dependent and has a physical difficulty. And as they go through their journey both their similar needs and different difficulties will be transformed. Tyler’s journey will be a journey out of self-sufficiency and selfishness while Zak’s will be a journey out of his self-perception of deformity, disabled. And they will find this as they create a new family
The first two scenes of the movie open with solitary characters. A shot of Zak and then a shot of Tyler, symbolically communicating their lack of family, their loneliness. This will symbolically change by the end of the movie where the last frame will be Zak, Tyler, and Eleanor, a worker at the retirement home who will run away with them. But let’s not jump too quickly to the end.
When the story begins Tyler is stealing crabs from other fishermans’ traps. The other fisherman confront him, beat him up, and then Tyler sets fire to their equipment. The fisherman see the fire and start to chase after Tyler. Tyler escapes in a boat that unbeknownst to him, Zak hid himself in, looking for anyway to get to his wrestling school.
After some convincing, Tyler finally agrees to drop Zak off at the school on his way to Florida. Notice, Tyler begins thinking two false assumptions: first, that they are on different journeys and second, that he is leading Zak.
The first rule that Tyler establishes is that Zak cannot slow him down. So between geographically leading them and physically being faster, Tyler assumes that he is the independent, strong one, leading a physically slow, Down Syndrome boy down south.
But Tyler doesn’t realize that leading the physical journey pales in comparison to the importance of the internal journey of transformation and in that journey he is the follower.
This inversion of the leader follower...
  continue reading

80 episodes

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