The world inside me is bigger and more fascinating than the world outside. Include High School Poem by The Knife. Let's go! .
“The world inside me is bigger and more fascinating than the world outside. The world is within me and it is infinite. I am the world. And you, too, are peace. Remember that if you look at the abyss for a long time, the abyss will sooner or later begin to look at you? If you, like Hannah with the fabulous name Anderson, start leaving messages to the world, he will eventually respond. But if the lines are addressed to another dimension: unknown, more sensitive, addictive, sensitive, strange, why should the answer be within the so-called norm?
If you remember how much effort and energy popular girls spend to maintain their image, it may be tempting to think that following the rancid formula “not like everyone else” is much easier. But this is also a heavy burden, because even this game has its own rules. You need your own style in clothes, a protesting position, unwillingness to communicate with others and (if you still manage to get it) a young man who causes surprise and (or) bewilderment. However, Hannah with two h (the main character will repeatedly tell how her name is written, distinguishing herself from the rest, trivial, Hannah with one h in her name) managed to move away from the Lisbethsalander aggressive style and appear before the viewer urban forest fairy. Warm, sweet, soulful. Relationships with a parent, contrary to expectations from the drama about 17-18-year-olds, are developing perfectly, girlfriends are caring, albeit frivolous (this can be attributed to the lack of seriousness of age), on a typical home drunk even kisses a beautiful boy. Maybe Hannah's just an ordinary girl. A casual acquaintance, Jens Nosslin, reads a line from Paul Oster: “18 is a terrible age.” Imagining myself to be older than my classmates, I was merely searching for a way to express my youth differently from them.” So maybe this is the answer to the eternal struggle against the world: Are you like everyone who wants to be different? This is your way of expressing youth.
In the treasury of typical "non-satisfaction" The Hannahs dropped postmodern verses about the pressing and the feelings, emphasized indifference to sex, contempt for alcohol, veganism as a worldview, the wrong young man (or two, no, even three, if Jens is labeled young). Three men, three different ways. The first, Jens, is a divorced teacher, a sensitive person, a wise mentor, a mysterious lover of coffee with a book in his hands and intellectually communicate with an unfamiliar underage girl. The second, Edin, is a Bosnian immigrant, half-Muslim, listening to lectures from a cute ten-year-old sister and taking swimming lessons from the main character. The third, Andreas, is a skinhead, ready to kiss a stranger in the hijab in front of everyone and arrange a manifesto on women’s rights for the entire shopping center. He, by the way, is also a lover of protesting against everyone and everything and organizing, as they would now be called, performances that outrage ordinary society. Each path-man promises a lot of problems and tickles nerves, forcing you to anticipate the misunderstanding / outrage of others pouring honey on self-love.
And yet Hannah in an elusive way manages not to get the stamp of the interpretation of Woodyallen's Christina in Barcelona, but to choose her own path, and, more importantly, to walk it with dignity. Hannah will not arrange a cheap “twilight” drama from the series “two guys and a girl who does not know who to choose”, she is not afraid of anything, even to come to the seemingly dangerous stranger in another city and stay in his apartment, she will not let a knife fight take place, uniting everyone without a nauseating developing scarlet cloak and panties over tights. Hannah will not be patient and ask a thousand girl questions, but will voice the main one: “How to love and surrender to a person, while preserving yourself?” It is easier to live a perfect life alone, without any burden. But why are these ideals when the real world responds to your messages in the most bizarre way? Hannah is natural. Always. Even when he prepares a speech for Jens in advance, in order to summon him to an amusing conversation about being. “I'll take it easy. But not today, promises the main character, we shake our heads, smile and understand that we are all like this: understanding, but unwilling to change something. And there is an amazing unity of people.
In a modest chronology, an hour and a half fits a dynamic narrative about a girl in which “just like all of us” and “not like everyone else” miraculously merge, making her both unique and universal. You can get to know yourself, think about a lot of questions and just look for answers with the main character. “The other way” is not about teenagers, but about people who do not want to follow the intended route; easy to see and deep in thought. . .