A horrific as Leonard's situation is, if you want to experience even deeper existential horror, look into the case of Clive Wearing. Mr. Wearing developed encephalitis in 1985, and it destroyed not only his ability to make new memories, but it also erased most of his existing memories. He knows who his wife is, but doesn't remember their wedding day. He recognizes his children, but doesn't remember their births. He can play the piano beautifully, but insists he's never heard a note before. He's utterly alone, his whole consciousness consisting of the last thirty seconds at most. He doesn't know where he is, why he's there, or anything that's ever happened to him. It's the profoundest kind of loneliness I know of. He doesn't even trust his own handwriting.
@TrouvatkiDePercusion5 ай бұрын
I am definitely gonna check this out. Thank you!!
@SparePencils4 ай бұрын
The pain is palpable. How horrible.
@Icthyologist4 ай бұрын
I am awake.
@harambo884 ай бұрын
sounds very comforting. the moments i can remembere are those few that hurt not so bad that i allready pushed them away but so many small memorys, like i am relatet to who or such banalitys allways felt like brainclutter to me. i am quite positiv i am able to manage a state thats like a restart every 24 hour and i would be way more healthy and happy. not thinking about traumatic things that keep me catched for 10 hours for reading some post-ots ten minutes daily.
@pente124 ай бұрын
@@harambo88Clive Wearing’s short term memory is approximately 7 seconds long, not 24 hours. Would you want a “mind reset” ten thousand times every day?
@roxanne48205 ай бұрын
Memento will forever be Christopher Nolan's greatest masterpiece, imo. Really brilliant analysis video.
@sder5 ай бұрын
Agreed. Thanks for watching!
@turnerburner9225 ай бұрын
I think The Prestige is better
@juangalton9995 ай бұрын
Agreed. Sadly his movies have really gone down qualitatively as the fame went to his head.
@jekw234 ай бұрын
Agree. This then Prestige and Insomnia. All gone downhill since Inception.
@trancendental53734 ай бұрын
lol you guys are insane, he's the most consistently brilliant director of our day. Batman is the mythical hero of our time, cry more.
@andallicansayis4 ай бұрын
Lenny learned to trust his handwriting. he writes everything in capital letters. he wrote "do not trust her" in cursive.. because it was not true. "Remember Sammy Jenkis" is also written in cursive
@jordanmoscovitch5 ай бұрын
“I like to remember things my own way. How I remembered them, not necessarily the way they happened.”
@jdunham3 ай бұрын
Fred Madison from Lost Highway! It'd be interesting to see a comparison of his character with Leonard Shelby / Sammy Jankis, as he has his own (presumably) continuous escape from reality.
@StoutProper2 ай бұрын
In fact that’s exactly how never memory works
@IsaacLuke5 ай бұрын
Excellent breakdown of the movie! The first time I watched Memento I enjoyed it a lot but the way you broke down the smaller details really brought the movie to life for me. I especialy appreciated the part where you referenced part of the short story saying, "For a few minutes everyday, a man becomes a genius filled with clarity and insight but eventually you have to hand down the controls to the other parts of you." We all have different versions of ourselves with different goals, purposes, and lifestyles depending on the circumstances we are going through. Like you mentioned at the end, we feel as though our different subjective perspectives on life are what we should find our purpose but in reality our perspective along with everyone around us is everchanging making it unreliable. That is why it is essential for us to seek objectivity in our lives so that we may be fully satisfied by a purpose that isnt simply a portrayal of our own selfish desires.
@sder5 ай бұрын
Very well said. Love hearing this feedback.
@patrickwheeler57015 ай бұрын
did you find the egg?
@JAddamsEdu5 ай бұрын
I’ve been on a binge read and listening about Narcissism, one of the aspects mentioned is the person has difficulty in empathizing with their past self. The memory is there, but the shame and consequence is evaded. Their slate is cleaned over and over again, altering their perception of reality to flee the pain of what they’ve done. They manipulate their own reality and this made me think of that.
@sder5 ай бұрын
That is very interesting.
@ContactsNfilters3 ай бұрын
Yes! It's absolutely rooted in a deep shame. I love Brené Brown's research into how that effects all of us. From her book 'Daring Greatly' "when I look at narcissism through the vulnerability lens, I see the shame-based fear of being ordinary. I see the fear of never feeling... extraordinary enough to be noticed, to be lovable, to belong, or to cultivate a sense of purpose."
@RandomPerson283372 ай бұрын
Yes this is true check sam vakim work
@paulcooper10464 ай бұрын
I initially found Leonard Shelby to be sympathetic when viewing Memento for the first time. In hindsight, after multiple viewings, I have clarity regarding how dark and dangerous his character is. He's an executioner who shows zero signs of slowing down. Note that he executed his wife as well as numerous others both referenced specifically and suggested in the film. Memento is one of the best films I've ever seen and is in the conversation for the best. It's elite.
@jonathanfeldheim65545 ай бұрын
Great video, sir. Teddy's death never felt so tragic, the fact it seemed like such a pragmatic thing for Leonard to do at the time is a pretty damning commentary on insurance adjusters' serial-killer like morality
@sder5 ай бұрын
I appreciate the comment. That's a great observation.
@rottensquid3 ай бұрын
Except that Teddy was feeding Leonard's self-destruction from day one. As the only one who really understood him, Teddy could have helped Leonard let go. But he wanted someone he could manipulate. Teddy is Iago to Leonard's Othello, sabotaging him. Without Teddy stringing him along with new evidence, new targets, new manipulations, Leonard may finally be able to construct a half-truth that allows him to let go.
@jerryrikki94662 ай бұрын
You misunderstood shutter Island. Teddys is actually a us Marshall, he realizes he is trapped on the island with no form of communication. He refuses to be convinced with their drugs and story so he looks at his capture and poses the question" live as a monster (the doctors) or die as a good man. The doctor nods to the other doctors that teddy needs to be lobotomized and he goes willingly, knowing theres no way out but that he will die a good man@@sder
@GM-qw4hiАй бұрын
@@jerryrikki9466I think you might be confusing teddy from shutter island with teddy from Memento, which is the one they’re talking about in this reply
@Druku19772 ай бұрын
I rented Memento on a whim at blockbuster because I liked the cover of the DVD case. I took it home, watched it, went to bed, got up and watched it 6 more times. Every time someone new came over to hang out we watched Memento. That was the moment I knew Christopher Nolan was a genius.
@joywagner979Ай бұрын
I first watched this movie with a dude who wanted to "Netflix 'n chill" (but in 2005, so indeed, more like "Blockbuster 'n chill"). Honestly I was into him too, and we may have started dating or even got married if we had rented a different movie. As it was, I was way too riveted by the film to "chill" at all, so he got the impression I wasn't interested in him and we never hung out again. But to be fair, I was, in fact, more interested in "Memento" than I was in banging -- because "Memento" is a work of genius and banging is just banging.
@orbis17Күн бұрын
@@joywagner979 how did he lack the perception to not blame the film(in the best way possible). Perhaps it was went over his head a little? In which case, his loss! You dont watch a movie like memento every day.
@joywagner97917 сағат бұрын
@@orbis17 good point. That suggests a tremendous lack of perception on this dude's part ... I can probably thank "Memento" for helping me to avoid dating him, actually 🕶
@laxel45305 ай бұрын
I dont understand why this channel isnt watched by more people. Your content is amezing brotha
@sder5 ай бұрын
Much appreciated.
@shayanahmed71325 ай бұрын
Nolan also said that all he did was direct the film. It was Guy Pearce that mastered the character and gave the character tons of personality. Wonder why he has never casted him again.
@thekinghass5 ай бұрын
Well this time I will watch complete before it is deleted again
@sder5 ай бұрын
KZbin is being a pain on this one for some reason.
@aHedgerowFrog5 ай бұрын
@@sder 3rd time's the charm, heh
@richardromanashton5 ай бұрын
Ironic that this video is the one that keeps getting erased…
@ChrisDanceMusic5 ай бұрын
I came across Memento by chance. There was a collection of dvds with no cases all in 1 cd/dvd holder. So glad i watched it, absolute brilliant movie.
@zehrazahoor78553 ай бұрын
Accidentally coming across a great piece of media creates such a strong experience for me that it can rival childhood memories
@musicman20473 ай бұрын
I had the dvd, great film, you can watch it in reverse too, nice feature.
@cine_hazique5 ай бұрын
First time i watched memento even after finishing the movie i thought teddy was the killer, 2nd time i watched with my brother holy shit i understand the twist and a lot more things. This was Christopher Nolan's masterpiece. Now this film is in my top 10 fav film. Great video, you got a new subscriber
@sder5 ай бұрын
The first rewatch for this movie went crazyyy. Thanks for the sub 🤝
@freedompretzel5 ай бұрын
same for me, the second watch really made me understand a lot I was missing
@johndcoffee6323 ай бұрын
I mean Teddy killed Jimmy for the money, he just used Leonard as a weapon to keep his hands clean
@cine_hazique3 ай бұрын
@@johndcoffee632 yeah and there is one more twist about leonard if you know you know
@patrickrichardson25182 ай бұрын
FWIW - When we use the word "memento" in English, we use it as a noun meaning "something to remember (you) by" which is a phrase Leonard says when (I think) he snaps Natalie's picture. It's also an apt description of the clues Leonard collects throughout the movie; all pieces of information in which "to remember - something - by," from the tattoos to the Polaroids etc.
@seanmalak4 ай бұрын
Extraordinary essay and analysis. I am currently working on an essay/retrospective analysis on this film. I was very intrigued by your arguments about Leonard's 'condition,' primarily the main argument regarding his subjectivity versus objectivity. The comparison of Leonard's existence to the center of a clock, as the driver of the hands, around which time passes, is very clever. There is a lot to unpack here. I see Leonard living a fugue-like state where he vacillates between what he knows about himself (pre-incident) and his current reality (being a serial killer) however futile and fragmented an existence it is. Leonard's hell is the people who surround him and keep him going on this perpetual quest to find John G. I agree with your point, though, about Leonard not being able to face himself when confronted with the objective truth about his current life as a killer; subsequently choosing to find another man to hunt and kill. I would only point out that the choice is still influenced by an untrustworthy source in "Teddy." Teddy tells Leonard that all this treacherous game spirals on because Leonard chooses to lie to himself about what he has become. Although it is a plausible assertion, I am skeptical of the source. We are shown repeatedly throughout the story how Teddy is a liar--indeed, that isn't even his real name--and that he has motives of his own. One possible question I ask myself is whether Teddy had prior knowledge of the incident which resulted in Leonard's condition or was involved in some way. Even if that is not the case, once he became assigned to the case, as he states, he chose to use Leonard for nefarious illegal endeavors, such as the killing of the Jimmy for drug money. My point is that not only is Teddy an unreliable character, but worse than Leonard because he can remember the details of what he sets forth Leonard upon.
@crunchbite0055 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, Shutter Island can actually be viewed from Teddy's perspective as well. There are many clues that point to him being manipulated into thinking he is Andrew. In fact, there are reasons to believe he has been drugged since the beginning on the ship. The brilliance of the story is: starting out with a Marshall, convincing him and the audience that he's crazy, and still providing enough clues that he's not.
@MrJerichoPumpkin5 ай бұрын
yeah, it's actually terrifying that Shutter Island could be the greatest gaslighting ever told
@DarranKern5 ай бұрын
Shutter Island is a lot less cool of a movie when you guess the (EXTREMELY OBVIOUS) twist ten minutes into the film
@crunchbite0055 ай бұрын
@@DarranKern The hyperbole is strong in you.
@DarranKern5 ай бұрын
@@crunchbite005 nope, Im far from the only person who guessed it immediately. When you have Fight Club-esque, Tyler Durden hints in the first ten minutes of your film, and Shutter Island is far from the first film to use this trope (and not the first to blatantly wink at the audience that hallucinatory, unreliable narrator things are going on,) once you correctly guess the twist, the film is two entire hours of winking and hinting and whispering something you already know. Its not even remotely subtle
@crunchbite0055 ай бұрын
@@DarranKern I meant (EXTREMELY OBVIOUS) is a bit much. It took me a few watches to really piece it together. But it doesn't really matter. It's still fun to experience even if you know the twist. And I still enjoy other people's theories and excitement.
@SnootchieBootchies275 ай бұрын
I’ve always had a different take on Teddy. I went with "don’t believe his lies”. As such, Teddy is the one manipulating. Leonard never found his wife’s killer, Teddy lied about that.
@sder5 ай бұрын
Oh that’s an awesome take
@johndcoffee6323 ай бұрын
Totally agree, is he a cop? Did he fake the police report? Who knows.
@snazzybean5 ай бұрын
Wow. This was SO good, especially enjoyed your thoughts at the end. I love it when details are pointed out about my favorite movies that I never thought of even when I've watched the movie multiple times, like with this one. And the clips from the Nolan interview were fascinating, thank you for those. Liked and subbed, looking forward to more of your work.
@sder5 ай бұрын
Glad I could provide some new perspective. Thanks for subscribing!
@aHedgerowFrog5 ай бұрын
Teddy was the best character. Its easier and more comfortable to trust anyone else than the one who helps you.
@DorkoDoes5 ай бұрын
Amazing video buddy. You did an amazing job comparing these films. I’ve never thought about it before this. Thank you man. Keep it up
@sder5 ай бұрын
Thank you 🤝
@gamervet47605 ай бұрын
I've been mesmerized by this movie since 2009. My favorite thing about it is that everyone Lenny involves can be honest with themselves. No matter how ugly or horrifying they can still say, they did awful things. Lenny can't he has to be a good husband. He has his wife remembered in such a way. No one knows anything about Leonard's wife, but Leonard, but he's the only one who can't remember her.
@corban0the119 күн бұрын
Dammit, now I have to watch memento before I can get to the good stuff in this vid. Thanks for showing me a new movie.
@lindseystein96765 ай бұрын
I wish I still had the dvd of memento where you can watch it chronologically
@iamnotinvolved13093 ай бұрын
You can find a video like that on KZbin
@orbis17Күн бұрын
Man, that was an excellent video essay/analysis and It's a great film also, Nolan can do no wrong in my eyes.
@tessiepinkman4 ай бұрын
This is, possibly, *the* best analysis of _Memento_ I've ever had the pleasure of hearing and watching. I am just enamored with the way you talk and explain your, very well thought out, ideas. It's perfect! Thank you for sharing this with all of us. Now I'm gonna check out some of your other videos, and subscribe to your channel because this is exactly my cup of tea. Hope you're having a wonderful summer! Peace, from this _(eeever so slightly)_ crazy Swedish woman, who lives in Norway ;P
@sder4 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for watching! I have more videos like this one planned so stick around!
@lizzfrmhon5 ай бұрын
Christopher Nolan is really obsessed with the concept of time.
@sder5 ай бұрын
Very much so
@zaratec25654 ай бұрын
aren't we all?
@ethanjannes75874 ай бұрын
To me the cope of the investigation was always, as much about sublimating the banal truth of his wife’s death and his complicity in it(the Sammy story), also that he literally needs the mystery to give himself a reason to engage with the world and keep his mind from further deterioration. It’s an extreme form of self stimulation
@HeatherHolt5 ай бұрын
Remember Sammy Jankis ❤ What a great video my guy
@sder5 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@earthstrum3 ай бұрын
This essay was really well written. Appreciate it
@jacobcockerham80345 ай бұрын
Nothing hits like a new soder upload
@aHedgerowFrog5 ай бұрын
I agree- though if it continues in this fashion I might get a concussion😁
@Chigtology5 ай бұрын
Very cool video and one of my favorite movies. I’ve always considered the confrontation with Teddy as another layer of subjective reality and manipulation, another layer obscuring Leonard’s “true” self, but I think your point about the sociopath logic of Leonard’s actions is really interesting. God I love this movie.
@audreyquinn735 ай бұрын
First time viewer of your channel. Excellent content! New subscriber here. Wishing you great success; you deserve it. ❤
@sder5 ай бұрын
Means a lot 🙏🙏🙏
@northernbrother12585 ай бұрын
Still Nolan's best movie!
@sder5 ай бұрын
agreed
@FutureDeep4 ай бұрын
20:00 Would your suggested note of "I did it" mean that he wanted himself to think he'd killed his wife's killer or that he was the one that killed her? All options on the table, I think he chose the best one for himself, or his forever future selves.
@keithwilliams88Ай бұрын
Leonard’s condition only was able to be used to steer him towards victims by Teddy. His lack of memories make his ability to cover his tracks nonexistent. For example he has no qualms about driving around a dead man’s truck because he simply doesn’t know. With Teddy dead, his days before apprehension are numbered.
@gelatinousjoe797915 күн бұрын
Yeah, he’s more or less doomed to either be killed by a gangster or arrested in the chronological end. On paper his game goes on, but in reality Teddy was his enabler.
@johndcoffee6323 ай бұрын
It's so cool that the way the story is told leaves me longing for the actual facts, but I'll never get them, because Leonard never does. It's not about facts, it's about his and our interpretation of subjective truth. Did Lenny kill before Jimmy? Was Sammy married? Did Lenny kill his wife? Was Teddy a cop? Did he give Lenny a police report and did Lenny censor it? or did Teddy give him a fake to manipulate him? Why was Lenny smiling in that picture? Was the second picture he burned the smiling one? Maybe on a rewatch I might answer one or two of those questions, but the rest, all I'm left with is the subjective. Amazing movie And amazing analysis, definitely the most informative I've seen. You've earned a new subscriber.
@Mizz-Aware2 ай бұрын
Awesome video. Very articulate and calming. 🎉
@Nomad3dil3 ай бұрын
Subscribed; love the parallel you drew between the two movies
@katherinekelly64324 ай бұрын
Every relationship has an element of deception in it. Sometimes it is self-deception and other times it is deception of the other. It forms a complicated dance of mild insanity that people call happiness until they can't
@vania-a3 ай бұрын
I've watched over 1k movies and Memento is literally my favorite movie ever
@MrOhpieguy5 ай бұрын
I've seen the film 7 times, and I thought I understood. Wow, amazing break down of his psychology
@sder5 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
@MrOhpieguy5 ай бұрын
@@sder No sir, thank YOU!
@asleeper13929 күн бұрын
Please could you make an analysis for Shutter Island too?
@astrodelgado44732 ай бұрын
Dude I literally just watched these movies back to back today for the first time and this pops up on my recommend 💀💀💀
@briankenney95284 ай бұрын
Well more accurately, Leonard's wife used Leonard to commit suicide
@sder4 ай бұрын
I haven’t heard that perspective, super interesting
@MinorKey1353 ай бұрын
I always wondered about the logistics of her death so this makes a lot of (tragic) sense
@pranav_k__2 ай бұрын
@@sderit's not "a perspective", it's what actually happened. sammy jankis was a parallel for his own life.
@M0YO2 ай бұрын
@@pranav_k__ see this is what i initially thought, but how could he have managed to recall *post accident* about how “sammy” assisted his wife’s suicide to a fine detail. to my understanding the sammy tat is the only one that makes him recall pre accident. so it is either that he can retain post accident memory of some sort but represses it, or his wife was killed in another way post accident. either way it’s because he just can’t seem to accept the reality of how his wife was killed.
@edward0410723 ай бұрын
Not sure if you are an avid reader, but would love your take on Gene Wolfe’s- Book of the New Sun. Especially if you take in the story through a similar lens in which you have broken down these films. It is *Chefs Kiss*
@ryancalder41585 ай бұрын
Shutter island was released in 2010
@nothingruler14All5 ай бұрын
Leonard found out about his condition after he was diagnosed with his condition. So how does he remember that he has this condition?
@orlandoalessandrini25055 ай бұрын
He remembers Sammy Jenkins. And on an off note, I worked as a 911 operator, and got a call once about a guy who would get short term memory loss after having seizures. I asked the nurse how could he remember this, and she told me that he was aware he would forget after the seizures. Hope this helps.
@C00kiesAplenty5 ай бұрын
Short term memory loss only prevents forming new memories, it doesn't prevent developing new habits or instincts. He probably had enough conversations with his wife for it to have become second nature to him. That and it's hinted at in the movie that his condition is psychological, not physical.
@MichaelFalkowski3 ай бұрын
Amazing video! One thing tho, Shudder island came out in 2010 I believe.
@iluvsakuraandsyaoran4 ай бұрын
i'm a big fan of nolan's works and THIS is how i find out he's british 🤣🤣🤣 great work, enjoyed this a lot!
@sder4 ай бұрын
😂😂
@mb27763 ай бұрын
Awesome movie, although the first time I watched it randomly on TV, I had a high fever which just ads to the confusion of the whole movie. In Hindsight, it probably add to the mood, like dimming the lights when watching a horror movie :D
@youngheffeh56915 ай бұрын
I take that potato chip comment personally (as I eat potato chips watching this)
@sder5 ай бұрын
😂😂
@genin6924 күн бұрын
Only problem with memento and his memory loss, it easily solvable even back in the early 2000s if the cop has just used a video camera to film a few things and kept it with him to show lenny whenever they met up again as he knew he had memloss They should have set that movie in the 50s and given it a filmnoir vibe. Would have been epic
@kaiserfoxi2665 ай бұрын
Yoo I knew I recognized Teddy's voice, he's Weasel in Mob of the Dead
@rottensquid4 ай бұрын
He's also in a little movie called The Matrix. "Why, oh why didn't I choose the BLUE pill?"
@patrickwheeler57015 ай бұрын
ah yes 'memento' the film that ends in the middle
@briankenney95284 ай бұрын
...now where was I?
@bayleighj5 ай бұрын
this was amazing!! imo, momento is better than shutter island, i mentioned momento to a few of my friends and they didn’t know what it was. your analysis on this was awesome!!!! can’t wait to see where this channel goes!!
@sder5 ай бұрын
I appreciate it!
@NarcissistAU5 ай бұрын
Thank you! Adore Memento, never read the short story. Wizard. 👌
@jamiekelly31135 ай бұрын
Phenomenal video dude!! brb checking out more of your content
@sder5 ай бұрын
I appreciate it!!
@El-up1ri5 ай бұрын
One of the best movies ever made.
@sder5 ай бұрын
agreed
@declan9210028 күн бұрын
Momento was great. I just can't get passed the tattoos as evidence.. ARE THEY ALL NOT CONTRADICTORY NOW? How many phone numbers/license plates can he possibly tattoo on himself and still follow the clues?
@Icebearhaswares5 ай бұрын
Music in the background at the start please? Absolutely beautiful ❤
@hurricaneraeАй бұрын
I know it is from the Memento soundtrack, but I can't remember the song name or artist off hand.
@ethanjannes75874 ай бұрын
I always thought the basic premise of this guy’s behavior and mental state fitting into this perfect pattern of the avoidant trauma response, but actually that’s not literally happening because what’s literally happening is he has memory loss from physical brain damage…yeah I always thought that sounded sus but I thought of it in meta terms as Christopher Nolan putting a redundant framing device on top of another rather than looking for diegetic reasons for it
@Jotamov5 ай бұрын
This video is incredible
@sder5 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
@cherusiderea13305 ай бұрын
The DVD I bought of Memento has a feature where you can watch the scenes in chronological order instead of the order Nolan put them in, and I thought it was just so ... not it?
@TheInfamousBertmanАй бұрын
My 2nd favorite film of all time
@MightyEFX4 ай бұрын
My brother, SHUTTER ISLAND released in 2010.. in 2006, martin scorcese made THE DEPARTED
@sder4 ай бұрын
Yeah, simple typo, I have no idea how it slipped past me in editing 🤷♂️
@adamhunter70145 ай бұрын
This is my third watch, i forget the first time i watched it so each time i rewatch this video its like the first time i am watching it 😅
@sder5 ай бұрын
Haha, I guess that’s a good thing 😂
@satanplayagain58245 ай бұрын
Hey man love it btw are you looking for video editor?
@sder5 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment- not looking for an editor at the moment.
@poullashАй бұрын
Thank you for the link :)
@sderАй бұрын
Sure thing!
@Wintertoes4 ай бұрын
I disagree with your conclusion on Shutter Island; I think the movie is about the fact that they ARE preforming experiments on the island, and they've brainwashed the detective into BELIEVING he is a murderer, with the cigarettes. The storm plays a key role in noticing that fact!!
@haileyrivera29485 ай бұрын
This was spot on
@sder5 ай бұрын
thank you.
@tomdolben3 ай бұрын
holy shit all of my favourite movies are christopher nolan's and i didnt even realise it
@nathanlevesque78124 ай бұрын
The last analysis of Memento I watched just wanted to paint him as a villain. Glad to see deeper thought.
@sder4 ай бұрын
I appreciate it
@davidwest30564 ай бұрын
It is crazy how different we interpreted this movie. I always believed him when he said “you think I don’t know my wife”. I did not believe his lies, lol
@sder4 ай бұрын
Interesting
@iah68665 ай бұрын
Fantastic video 🎉🎉
@sder5 ай бұрын
Thank you ‼️⛄️
@joshuapatrick6824 ай бұрын
It doesn’t become evident until the last scene of the film but Leonard slamming on the brakes of the car means that he is 100% faking his “condition” whether or not it is voluntary.
@kylemajerczyk81604 ай бұрын
How is he faking?
@MinorKey1353 ай бұрын
I’d love to read your breakdown of this!
@werecat98342 ай бұрын
@@kylemajerczyk8160 See, i have this condition.... It makes me narrate my life as if I'm in a Christopher Nolan film, when I'm really just a bloodthirsty lunatic for no reason.
@hurricaneraeАй бұрын
@@kylemajerczyk8160 Because even though he is thouroughly distracted by his own thoughts, he suddenly recognizes the location he is looking for.
@ajplays-gamesandmusic4568Ай бұрын
@@hurricanerae He's got no familiarity with the area. But he's just done something he wants to remember. He slams his breaks because, "oh shit, that was a tattoo parlor I just passed."
@Ed-zp2xo5 ай бұрын
What I never understood about this movie is that given that he did the Sammy Jenkis wife insulin thing, how come he is able to remember that when it happened after his injury (even if he remembers it having happened to someone else)
@JoshSweetvale5 ай бұрын
Combinations of mental and physical trauma can cause unpredictable results. It's improbable but not impossible.
@C00kiesAplenty5 ай бұрын
Short term memory loss prevents forming new memories, it (weirdly enough) does not prevent forming new instincts or habits. After his injury he probably had the same conversation with his wife anout his condition severak times a day, and each time immediately thought about Sammy Jenkins. Eventually he mixes up the stories in the second nature part of his brain, which does still work.
@cjsdizzy5 ай бұрын
Fantastic video
@sder5 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@bigbitehood13535 ай бұрын
Memento is a better Matrix movie than any of the Matrix movies
@sder5 ай бұрын
I AGREE
@notmyrealpseudonym6702Ай бұрын
The 13th floor is a better matrix movie than the matrix
@ajplays-gamesandmusic4568Ай бұрын
I don't think Leonard Killed his wife. Teddy is a dishonest crooked cop. I believe him when he says he helped him find the killer and get his revenge, and I believe Leonard forgot about it 10 minutes later, but Leonard's memory is not hazy about anything that happened before the accident. So when Teddy starts talking about how Leonard's wife was diabetic, and he's the one who killed her by accident, he's gaslighting him. Because Leonard knows it was Sammy that accidentally OD'd his wife with too much insulin (because he was the claims investigator on Sammy's insurance policy). That's what caused him to frame Teddy. He realized Teddy was lying to him, and using his short-term memory loss to get him to kill drug dealers.
@stephendean28963 ай бұрын
Time is the lie that all that lives must live within
@AshGorall5 ай бұрын
Bro… I was going through some bs one time and I was emotionally vulnerable to the max, and some woman came up to me and started manipulating me when I was down. I needed a friend and she wanted something else from me, and I knew it. But I needed a friend and the fantasy she provided me was so peaceful that I convinced myself that she really was my friend, and wasn’t just trying to manipulate me into getting something out of me. We were the best of “friends” for almost 2 years before we both kinda drifted away from each other slowly. I think we both knew what was going on the whole time but neither of us wanted to open up that can of worms. It is true, sometimes you will legit convince yourself that the delusion is reality, just so you can survive. It takes a particularly brutal and “in-your-face” style of callout from someone else who notices it in order to break free from it. Reality is often really brutal.
@phaedrus49315 ай бұрын
Like number 666 and subscribed. Another incredible video by a channel that doesn't miss.
@sder5 ай бұрын
Appreciated 🤝
@purpledabs5 ай бұрын
got to watch momento for the first itme in my ap psych class. now i have tattoos in the same style
@sder5 ай бұрын
That’s sick
@zymphad73772 ай бұрын
There is no cliff hanger or twist etc, this movie was very obvious. I know Nolan thinks he's clever, but he's not.
@zebtv20954 ай бұрын
My favorite movie
@EddieFonzarelli5 ай бұрын
Oi, my favorite film❤
@DonDavo882 ай бұрын
-Something about this makes me think of gaslighters.
@Johnconno16 күн бұрын
Shelby's the guy alright, but what about Robert Blake?
@manfredwilson4475Ай бұрын
Plot twist he was just a alcoholic and that's why he forgets everything
@poogmaster13 ай бұрын
Good analysis but I do think its possible Lenny killed his own wife in a rage, hit his head after throwing her to the ground because of the wet bathroom floor, and his mind invented a killer
@selwrynn67025 ай бұрын
Except that Teddy isn't a crazy killer man, he is a US Marshal who asked too many questions so was thrown into this MK Ultra-esque experiment where they tried to brainwash him into being crazy.
@makosimp502227 күн бұрын
I know people have to do it for advertising purposes but thank God you flat out say rape instead of "SA'd." I really hate it when people say it
@FireOccator10 күн бұрын
Aren't Memento and Shutter Island supposed to be ambiguous?
@sder8 күн бұрын
Yeah, but that's why they are perfect for discussion and comparing opinions
@JoshSweetvale5 ай бұрын
It's human nature. He used what he had as a tool to get what he wanted.
@shm0ney5 ай бұрын
Too bad the shutter island guy was actually a detective from the jump. He was supposed to be there investigating but they drugged him and convinced him he was nuts. Memento guy actually had a condition other than PTSD.
@sder5 ай бұрын
I’m not too familiar with that interpretation of shutter island. What reason would they have for convincing Teddy that he’s insane? What do they gain from that?
@shm0ney5 ай бұрын
@@sder kzbin.info/www/bejne/aZe6iaGkd9yMp7c
@shm0ney5 ай бұрын
@@sder They want to turn officers or normal people into brainwashed soldiers. The woman in the cave is real from what we can tell, so if she is to be believed then Teddy is not crazy. In the first scene on the boat, we see his partner, who we learn is actually a doctor at the facility. He is from the wrong place according to Teddy as he is supposed to be from Portland MAINE, but the Dr. says he's from Portland OREGON. This is how we know already that something doesn't add up. Why would he be coming from the mainland as well with a real gun if he were a patient there for TWO years. Finally, when meeting with the man he interviewed earlier he tells Teddy to "Let her go" meaning his wife as he was seeing visions of her in the form of hallucinations from the 'psychotropic drugs' they had him on. He could've gotten what he came for and left then and there but he got caught up in the manipulative psychology of avenging his wife. A plan planted there by his 'Partner' and the lead psychologist guy. All this evidence points to him being an actual Marshall, but getting brainwashed due to the extensive planning, coordination, and manipulation of all the staff on the island.
@TheOneAndOnlyNeuromod4 ай бұрын
He’s NOT a master manipulator. He’s delusional - and he has hippocampus damage with no abilities to store new long-term memories - but that doesn’t make him a manipulator.
@Sebastian-gf2fk5 ай бұрын
Maybe PTSD ? And it can happen for things outside your control
@sder5 ай бұрын
Yeah that could definitely come into play here. Could be interesting to analyze these characters from a more clinical perspective
@DREADEDuuubGAMING5 ай бұрын
I just realized he knew at the end of shutter island. I was always under the impression that he was too far gone and the plan didn’t work…..but he knew, he would have rather died a hero in his mind then the man who went through all that pain and suffering. That’s heavy
@sder5 ай бұрын
That’s at least my interpretation. A very dark resolution.