Explains Archives - LemonFire https://lemonfire.com.br/tag/explains/ News And Entertainment Mon, 09 Jun 2025 19:30:52 +0000 pt-BR hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://lemonfire.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-76EB4555-6A61-465E-8AEC-4358655A1AA9-32x32.png Explains Archives - LemonFire https://lemonfire.com.br/tag/explains/ 32 32 ‘The Life of Chuck’ star Tom Hiddleston explains the movie’s ghostly final scene https://lemonfire.com.br/the-life-of-chuck-tom-hiddleston-explains-final-scene-11747736/ https://lemonfire.com.br/the-life-of-chuck-tom-hiddleston-explains-final-scene-11747736/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2025 19:30:52 +0000 https://lemonfire.com.br/the-life-of-chuck-tom-hiddleston-explains-final-scene-11747736/ Would you want to know how you’ll die? It’s a question you might find yourself asking after watching The Life of Chuck (in theaters now). Based on the Steven King novella of the same name, the film ends with the titular character (played by Tom Hiddleston) walking away from an attic where he may have […]

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Would you want to know how you’ll die?

It’s a question you might find yourself asking after watching The Life of Chuck (in theaters now). Based on the Steven King novella of the same name, the film ends with the titular character (played by Tom Hiddleston) walking away from an attic where he may have just seen an apparition of himself at the end of his life. 

The film tells the story of Charles Krantz, a dance-loving accountant who tragically dies from a brain tumor at 39. Chuck’s life unfolds for the audience through three acts, presented in reverse, with the final act telling the story of his childhood. 

In Act III, young Chuck (played by both Benjamin Pajak and Jacob Tremblay) is forbidden from going into his attic by his grandfather, Albie Krantz (Mark Hamill). We learn that in that attic, Albie has seen ghostly apparitions showing the deaths of himself and his loved ones, and he doesn’t want Chuck to be traumatized by similar visions.

Mark Hamill.

NEON


But after Albie dies, teenage Chuck can no longer contain his curiosity. When he enters the room, he briefly sees an older version of himself in a hospital bed, hooked up to a monitor. Thanks to the reverse chronological storytelling, we know by this point in the film that young Chuck is indeed witnessing his own demise. But does Chuck let this phantom haunt him into adulthood?  

“Any premonition of death or the end of his life doesn’t scare him or suppress him,” Hiddleston tells Entertainment Weekly. “His choice in that moment is to live as fully as he can, which is the choice we all ought to make all the time. None of us know the day or the date that our lives will end. And if we think about it, we live with that uncertainty every day.” 

The reveal in Act III that Chuck has seen his final moment gives extra weight to earlier portions of the movie – specifically his spontaneous dance on the street in Act II. “Chuck is an accountant who on the inside is a dancer, and he contains multitudes, but he’s there to show us that we contain multitudes, to remember the infinite possibilities that we’re all born with,” Hiddleston says.

“You can try anything in life as long as you don’t hurt other people,” he continues. “Your life is yours to live and yours to explore, and yours to be curious about. And that curiosity is actually what sustains you.”

Annalise Basso, Tom Hiddleston.

NEON


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Despite the movie’s supernatural ending, Hiddleston hopes audiences leave theaters on a hopeful note. “I think it inspires an instinct to live, [and] think, ‘Well, I have now. I have the present moment. I have the people I love.’ You start to be grateful for what you have and inspired to live as fully and as joyfully as you can, with the awareness that life also contains some of the hard stuff. It contains struggle and pain and loss and grief, but it also contains joy and connection and love and inspiration.” 

He adds, “If you can hold onto that, you’re living.”



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‘The Life of Chuck’ director Mike Flanagan explains twist, Easter eggs https://lemonfire.com.br/the-life-of-chuck-director-mike-flanagan-explains-twist-easter-eggs/ https://lemonfire.com.br/the-life-of-chuck-director-mike-flanagan-explains-twist-easter-eggs/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2025 10:01:01 +0000 https://lemonfire.com.br/the-life-of-chuck-director-mike-flanagan-explains-twist-easter-eggs/ This article contains spoilers for The Life of Chuck. The Life of Chuck isn’t your average apocalypse movie.  Like the Stephen King novella that inspired it, director Mike Flanagan’s latest film is told in three acts, presented in reverse chronological order. However, the big twist, which slowly unfolds throughout the movie, is that the first […]

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This article contains spoilers for The Life of Chuck.

The Life of Chuck isn’t your average apocalypse movie. 

Like the Stephen King novella that inspired it, director Mike Flanagan’s latest film is told in three acts, presented in reverse chronological order. However, the big twist, which slowly unfolds throughout the movie, is that the first act — the one depicting the end of the world — is all in the title character Chuck’s (Tom Hiddleston) mind. 

With the help of young Chuck’s (Benjamin Pajak) English teacher, played by Kate Siegel, the conceit is explained by Act III. But there are plenty of Easter eggs along the way to help the audience understand what’s going on. 

“Having as many details in the first section of the movie that pay off later, and you understand where Chuck encountered these things and how he populated this universe in his head, that was a really fun thing,” Flanagan tells Entertainment Weekly

Chiwetel Ejiofor, Karen Gillan.

Courtesy of NEON


The first act centers on Chiwetel Ejiofor’s Marty Anderson, a divorced schoolteacher who, despite a series of apocalyptic events unfolding around him, becomes strangely fixated on new billboards popping up around town, each thanking a man named Chuck for “39 great years.” After a sinkhole takes over the town’s busiest intersection, Marty and his ex, Karen Gillan’s nurse Felicia Gordon, can’t help but reconnect (she’s noticed the strange ads, too). When cell service, internet, and cable all go out, Marty walks to Felicia’s house, where they sit together to watch the stars blink out one by one. 

It turns out that the Chuck from the billboards is Charles Krantz, a local man who’s dying of a brain tumor at the heartbreaking age of 39. The universe containing Marty and Felicia is only in Chuck’s head — an amalgamation of people and experiences from throughout his life.

“We tried very hard to make it clear in retrospect that the first 40 minutes exist out of time, that all the technology people are using is from different eras and all kind of blended together,” Flanagan says. “Whether or not everyone is able to pick up those threads on the first viewing, we hoped it would encourage more viewings. There are a lot of little connections there that are fun to make.”

The second and third acts tell the story of Chuck’s life. Some of the connections are easy to spot: Marty and Felicia are chaperones at Chuck’s school dance in Act III, and Carl Lumbly’s Sam Yarbrough, who Marty encounters on his walk to Felicia’s, is the funeral director when Chuck’s grandfather (Mark Hamill) dies.

But other Easter eggs are a little more difficult to spot: Actress Violet McGraw plays a young girl on roller skates who Marty encounters on his way to Felicia’s house in Act I. In Act II, Hiddleston’s adult Chuck briefly passes her after his impromptu street dance. Marty drives the same car as Chuck’s grandfather, and the boombox in Felicia’s nursing office that plays a commercial about Chuck is the same boombox that Samantha Sloyan’s Miss Rohrbacher uses to teach Chuck and his classmates dance in Act III. 

All three acts are also populated by the same background actors, adding a sense of familiarity to every face in the movie. “I loved that they would come back and be visible throughout,” Flanagan says of the small pool of background performers, “that there was a sense of echoing of the present in the past and that we could really hopefully trace the seeds of this imaginary world as he first encountered them.”

Carl Lumbly, Chiwetel Ejiofor.

Courtesy of NEON


If you didn’t pick up on all the tiny connections between the three acts, don’t worry – some of the movie’s crew members didn’t either. 

“We erred on the side of trying to allow most of the specific revelations to exist in the back half of the movie, but to not flinch away from the moments that could have revealed it in the beginning,” Flanagan says. “And even then, I had a handful of crew members, and I’ve read even a handful of reviews out of TIFF that didn’t get it and that didn’t figure that out. And so that makes me feel like we kind of hopefully hit it right in the sweet spot, because my thing was it can’t be too obvious and it can’t be too obscure.” 

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If you do opt to see the movie again with the aim of Easter egg hunting, Flanagan hopes you stay in your seat until the Act III scene when Siegel “grabs the audience by the face and specifically explains what’s happening” with references to Walt Whitman’s famous “I contain multitudes.”

He jokes, “I just feel bad for anyone who’s in the bathroom or getting popcorn during that.”



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‘Ballerina’ director explains ending, consequences for John Wick and Eve https://lemonfire.com.br/ballerina-director-explains-ending-consequences-for-john-wick-and-eve/ https://lemonfire.com.br/ballerina-director-explains-ending-consequences-for-john-wick-and-eve/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2025 07:43:01 +0000 https://lemonfire.com.br/ballerina-director-explains-ending-consequences-for-john-wick-and-eve/ This article contains spoilers for Ballerina. Eve’s (Ana de Armas) fight has only just begun by the end of Ballerina. The John Wick spinoff movie introduces a new ruthless assassin on a quest for vengeance, and director Len Wiseman tells Entertainment Weekly that there’s so much more yet to come with Eve’s story after this movie. […]

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This article contains spoilers for Ballerina.

Eve’s (Ana de Armas) fight has only just begun by the end of Ballerina.

The John Wick spinoff movie introduces a new ruthless assassin on a quest for vengeance, and director Len Wiseman tells Entertainment Weekly that there’s so much more yet to come with Eve’s story after this movie. And despite Keanu Reeves’ titular killer advising her multiple times to walk away from this life, she continues to dive deeper into the world of contract killings even after she finally gets her revenge.

“She’s checked herself into the Continental, and her next move is really sorting out how her whole life has been a lie,” Wiseman tells EW of where Eve goes from here. “She now understands what her father was really doing for her, understands where she came from, and decided, ‘I’ve made a choice. I’ve got the answers that I needed, but there are consequences in this world.'”

If Ballerina gets a sequel to continue exploring that open-ended conclusion, the director says it will need to unpack the fallout from Eve’s choices. “She has to now deal with the consequences that John Wick laid out to her, that Winston [Ian McShane] laid out to her,” Wiseman says. “It is a brutal world. You don’t walk off into the sunset very easily. And so now Eve’s next move is how to deal with the consequences of her actions in this [movie].”

Ana de Armas in ‘Ballerina’.

Larry D. Horricks


Ballerina is essentially Eve’s origin story, beginning with her tragic childhood. When her father (David Castañeda) is killed in front of her, she’s given over to the Ruska Roma for training in both killing and ballet. Twelve years later, she graduates to become a hired gun. Only two months into her new career, she discovers a clue about who really killed her father, motivating her to find and punish the mysterious cult of assassins responsible for his death.

While the Ruska Roma’s Director (Anjelica Huston) tries to dissuade Eve from seeking revenge, she immediately goes rogue, getting intel from New York’s Continental owner Winston that helps her track down the tribe’s leader, the Chancellor (Gabriel Byrne), and his entire town of trained assassins.

While fighting her way through the town, Eve learns she was actually stolen away from this place when she was a child by her father, who wanted her to have a better, less violent life. That’s why the Chancellor had her father killed, to punish him for kidnapping Eve. She also meets her long-lost older sister Lena (Catalina Sandino Moreno) in the town, but she’s killed pretty quickly — no emotional hugs here.

Eventually, the Baba Yaga himself, John Wick, is sent to kill Eve to stop her from causing a war between the Ruska Roma and the Chancellor’s gang of killers, who have had a truce for over 100 years. But John doesn’t follow through on his contract, instead helping Eve kill the Chancellor and save a little girl named Ella (Ava Joyce McCarthy) from a life of murder. Eve helps Ella reunite with her father, Daniel (Norman Reedus), ultimately finding redemption for her own tragic childhood.

It’s not a totally happy ending, though, since Eve discovers at the very end of the movie that a contract has been put out on her for $5 million, forcing her into action once again. Her original mission may have ended, but her troubles are only just beginning.

“The Chancellor relates to her at the ending that this cycle will continue: ‘You kill me, you’ve cut the head of the snake, but the body still lives,'” Wiseman says. “There will be ramifications of that. And she didn’t kill the entire village.”

The filmmaker would love to explore what would happen if Eve’s mother isn’t actually dead, as everyone believes. What if she returns to see her entire home destroyed and Lena dead?

Ana de Armas and Keanu Reeves in ‘Ballerina’.

Courtesy of Lionsgate


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“If I really were to get my full fantasy of that, her mother would discover that village and see it decimated and her daughter has been killed, so the ramifications can come in many different forms,” Wiseman says. “And also, is John completely off the hook for helping her out at the end? He technically was going by the rules in a sense, but he kind of fudged the rules a little bit. I don’t think anybody gets off kindly in this world.”

The director thought it was a no-brainer that John defied his orders and helped Eve in her mission instead of killing her, especially considering that this movie takes place between John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum and John Wick: Chapter 4.

“It comes down to John and what John has gone through in his life and what circumstances he’s been put in at this point,” Wiseman says. “And there’s an understanding of how sometimes this life takes things from you. He was somebody that is having to deal with the consequences of the revenge path that he went on and what he had lost, and so it really is him seeing a bit of himself in her and how personal it is and what has been destroyed about her life. So he feels for her in that moment.”

Ballerina is now playing in theaters.



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