Peter couldnt look back even if he wanted to...he was in complete and utter shock...lookin back would have made it real so his mind shut down while his body took over....gr8 portrayal imo...
Great reaction to a brilliant tension horror. When was the last time a horror film made you nearly jump out of your seat with a mere tongue click? A bit of geekdom regarding the lore behind this. They lore regarding King Paimon is almost all spot on! there are only a couple of diversions from the historic lore. 1. King Paimon is actually 1 of 9 Kings in Hell, not 8. The number 8 was chosen so it could be matched up to a direction of the compass & add a bit of extra depth to the story. 2. The beheading thing has nothing what so ever to do with the lore of King Paimon. The reason it was used in the film is because of the artworks we have of King Paimon on his camel. There are 3 heads hanging from his belt in the artwork. So that was used so it could add a bit of gore to a couple of scenes to heighten the tension. But some of the things that ARE lore accurate. Tony Collette's floating body is well within Paimon's abilities. His lore says he is able to bend & break the rules of physics. So floating would be kind of easy. & as he is able to break the laws of physics Paimon could easily turn, let's say wood, into gold to make his followers rich. I hope this adds a bit of extra shiver to the film. Hope everyone is having an amazing week & much love to all from here in the UK
The movie is great. My personal theory is that the filmmaker involved made this movie and Midsommar as a celebration of his religion. A religion that many in Hollywood, government/intelligence and big business believe in, but keep it a secret from the public. Making movies like this allows them to give full disclosure to the public while retaining plausible deniability that it's what they actually believe in and practice behind closed doors. Just a theory tho.
Do you have any proof of this? I find it hard to believe that they would make the religious groups in these movies evil murderous cults that manipulate their members into it if it was their own religion they were portraying. Do you have any proof that alludes to this being their religion, rather than cults being used as a tool for psychological horror? This movie in particular is all about inherited mental illness and how it impacts this family’s dynamic. The movie only ever brings anything supernatural in during the final act of the movie, once the tensions are already high. I believe it’s used to accentuate the true horror going on in their heads at this point, like a physical manifestation of their internal conflicts, which is the part of the movie that’s always chilled me the most. I hope this makes sense, I’m just a little confused what part of this movie read as a genuine religious devotion to you, rather than a horrific representation of generational trauma told through a scary ghost film.
Sorry im rly high rn but Im trying to say the only religious elements of this movie is a cult, and cult members don’t tend to believe their groups are bad, so they don’t portray them as such in media. Even down to the way the mom is ‘recruited’ is through a kind old woman she met through a grief counseling service. The filmmakers were trying to get the idea across that this cult is manipulative, evil, creepy, etc. if you watch media from a cult, like Scientology, it’ll show Scientology through rose tinted glasses. It’ll show you how they’re a family and Scientology saves lives. Scientology wouldn’t put out a movie portraying their cult how it truly is. I feel like making conspiracy theories like this miss the point of the movie and take away credit from the filmmakers who constructed such a cohesive yet heart wrenching narrative
@-Epiphany do you have any substantial proof that it's his religion? It seems a lot more likely that he was just making a horror movie that involved an evil cult. have you seen media from cults? why would he portray his own "religion" (although i don't even know what religion you'd consider this?) as evil and murderous? and why are the cults in midsommar and hereditary COMPLETELY different in every way? id have to be shown pretty convincing evidence to believe this conspiracy theory instead of just assuming he likes the horror of cults. in my opinion, it only cheapens the impact of his writing if you only read it as some unsubstantiated conspiracy theory, instead of looking at the message he did a great job of portraying about mental illness and the manipulation of cults.
Peter couldnt look back even if he wanted to...he was in complete and utter shock...lookin back would have made it real so his mind shut down while his body took over....gr8 portrayal imo...
i think this is now my favourite reaction channel
For real?
@@DarkSnakeReactsAgain Yeah man love your general vibe my bro :)
Appreciate it 😁
@@DarkSnakeReactsAgain a pleasure bro
@6:30 lmaoo “bring your *kiss teeth*” 😂😂😂
😂🤣
This is the Jamaican reaction channel I’ve been waiting for! 👍
Vincentian!
Da Vincy accent cah hide nun tall😂😂😂❤🇻🇨🇻🇨
Great reaction 🥰🥰🇹🇹🇹🇹the realness mixed with the accent, GOLDEN!!!!😊😊
😃😃 appreciate it 🇻🇨🇻🇨.
Oh yeah, I’m officially subscribed!
Heya Sabrina, videos are gonna be posted back on my main channel from now on "DarkSnakeReacts"
Why has the algorithm been hiding you from me???!!!!
TH-cam hates me it seems
@@DarkSnakeReactsAgain well hopefully liking and commenting puts you back on my feed because I love youuuuu 🥰
@@girlnettles I appreciate the love!!! You should head over to my main channel. That's where I post all my stuff now. DarkSnakeReacts
Great reaction 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥😂 I love folks reactions to horror
Great reaction to a brilliant tension horror. When was the last time a horror film made you nearly jump out of your seat with a mere tongue click?
A bit of geekdom regarding the lore behind this. They lore regarding King Paimon is almost all spot on! there are only a couple of diversions from the historic lore.
1. King Paimon is actually 1 of 9 Kings in Hell, not 8. The number 8 was chosen so it could be matched up to a direction of the compass & add a bit of extra depth to the story.
2. The beheading thing has nothing what so ever to do with the lore of King Paimon. The reason it was used in the film is because of the artworks we have of King Paimon on his camel. There are 3 heads hanging from his belt in the artwork. So that was used so it could add a bit of gore to a couple of scenes to heighten the tension.
But some of the things that ARE lore accurate. Tony Collette's floating body is well within Paimon's abilities. His lore says he is able to bend & break the rules of physics. So floating would be kind of easy. & as he is able to break the laws of physics Paimon could easily turn, let's say wood, into gold to make his followers rich.
I hope this adds a bit of extra shiver to the film.
Hope everyone is having an amazing week & much love to all from here in the UK
big up
Large up!
lmfaooooo you're too funny
The movie is great.
My personal theory is that the filmmaker involved made this movie and Midsommar as a celebration of his religion. A religion that many in Hollywood, government/intelligence and big business believe in, but keep it a secret from the public.
Making movies like this allows them to give full disclosure to the public while retaining plausible deniability that it's what they actually believe in and practice behind closed doors.
Just a theory tho.
Do you have any proof of this? I find it hard to believe that they would make the religious groups in these movies evil murderous cults that manipulate their members into it if it was their own religion they were portraying. Do you have any proof that alludes to this being their religion, rather than cults being used as a tool for psychological horror? This movie in particular is all about inherited mental illness and how it impacts this family’s dynamic. The movie only ever brings anything supernatural in during the final act of the movie, once the tensions are already high. I believe it’s used to accentuate the true horror going on in their heads at this point, like a physical manifestation of their internal conflicts, which is the part of the movie that’s always chilled me the most. I hope this makes sense, I’m just a little confused what part of this movie read as a genuine religious devotion to you, rather than a horrific representation of generational trauma told through a scary ghost film.
Sorry im rly high rn but Im trying to say the only religious elements of this movie is a cult, and cult members don’t tend to believe their groups are bad, so they don’t portray them as such in media. Even down to the way the mom is ‘recruited’ is through a kind old woman she met through a grief counseling service. The filmmakers were trying to get the idea across that this cult is manipulative, evil, creepy, etc. if you watch media from a cult, like Scientology, it’ll show Scientology through rose tinted glasses. It’ll show you how they’re a family and Scientology saves lives. Scientology wouldn’t put out a movie portraying their cult how it truly is. I feel like making conspiracy theories like this miss the point of the movie and take away credit from the filmmakers who constructed such a cohesive yet heart wrenching narrative
Im not trying to be rude at all I feel like I sound pretentious sorry 😓
@@catonyoutoobnah u good...they usually hide the truth in plain sight..eyes wide shut is another good example ...
@-Epiphany do you have any substantial proof that it's his religion? It seems a lot more likely that he was just making a horror movie that involved an evil cult. have you seen media from cults? why would he portray his own "religion" (although i don't even know what religion you'd consider this?) as evil and murderous? and why are the cults in midsommar and hereditary COMPLETELY different in every way? id have to be shown pretty convincing evidence to believe this conspiracy theory instead of just assuming he likes the horror of cults. in my opinion, it only cheapens the impact of his writing if you only read it as some unsubstantiated conspiracy theory, instead of looking at the message he did a great job of portraying about mental illness and the manipulation of cults.
Why? For creating an actual good horror movie? Not a cheap jumpscare movie like most mainstream horrors
God.... Please don't tell me you took the title literally 🧐