WHAT?


In the closing shot, the children playing in the street are chanting "The Farmer In The Dell."

But with with one exception: instead of the verb "takes" (as in "the Farmer takes the wife," "the wife takes the child," etc), the children say "KILLS" (as in "the Farmer KILLS the wife," "the wife KILLS the child," etc)).

Now - I've heard of poetic license before, but changing the line of a classic children's song for dramatic ironic effect???

"Don't call me 'honey', mac."
"Don't call me 'mac'... HONEY!"

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No, they didn't. You didn't hear it correctly.

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Throughout the movie, the children sing "The farmer 'chose' the wife", etc. instead of the more usual "takes".

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You weren't the only one. My daughter also thought the same thing.

The Divine Genealogy Goddess

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Throughout? I don't remember hearing the kids sing until the end. Scarcely remember even seeing them until the end. If they're saying "chose" they're certainly mispronouncing it. It sounds more like "choose."

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The movie begins with the same children singing the same song. Sure sounds like "kills" to me.

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changing the line of a classic children's song for dramatic ironic effect???


What's wrong with that? I thought it was pretty creepy and effective. It's not unbelievable that a group of kids would start singing that after what had happened anyway.


That is a masterpiece of understatement.

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Exactly. Not unlike "Lizzie Borden took an axe..."

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I clearly heard "the farmer KILLS the wife," too. However, I didn't find it creepy.




Hey there, Johnny Boy, I hope you fry!

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It wasn't "poetic license" on Vidor's part. Kids often do things like that - change words of nursey rymes to make them sexual or violent, re-enact crimes, etc.

I thought it made for an unbearably poignant end - As the kids thoughlessly mock her mother's murder, the daughter leaves the hot, awful neighborhood for the last time, a place she longed to leave, but never under such tragic circumstances.






"Do you indulge in any form of worship?"

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