MovieChat Forums > Time Bandits (1981) Discussion > What kind of an ending was that?

What kind of an ending was that?


The boy's parents blew up! Yay! He's an orphan! Hoorah! Haha! Good ole Terry.
Coming Soon... The December Man
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qj7fRpcXRI

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I know. I was like WTF? I guess the movie was trying to say not to be concerned about material things, but still, they died not because of that, but because they touched something they thought was meat. So....

Would have been better IF they had to die, is if they ran into the fire and never came back.

It could be God, the Devil, Buddha, an Alien...or it could be a kid playing a video game. - onn1320

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Though I love this movie, his parents blowing up and him standing there sad and confused is F'd up!!

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Director Terry Gilliam stated that parents should listen to their children and in this case they don't and so they die! And that is only right in a children's film.

Early test screenings showed that many young boys loved the bit with the parents getting blown up. But Gilliam said that little boys seemed to like that, whereas little girls just asked "well who is going to look after him?". But the little boys knew they didn't need looking after and that they would be fine.

Plus Sean Connery's character just leaves in the fire truck, but Gilliam suggests that it's almost like his character is out there somewhere, almost like a kind of guardian so when the kid needs him, he'll be there.

Gilliam stated that having gone through that adventure, Kevin is now more grown up and is better equipped to go forward in life, even though he is on his own.

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For real. His parents were more childish than he was, anyway.

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I didn't care about his parents blowing up, I just wish Connery-Fireman would have waved to the kid to jump on the firetruck and leave with him - that would have been more satisfying.

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Wouldn't have made much sense though. He didn't realize the kids parents had touched the evil and been blown up.

In my mind, I always imagined that he'd end up getting adopted by Sean the fireman somehow.

I am the eggman, they are the eggmen
I am the walrus, googoo goo joob goo goo goo goo joob-J Lennon

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As this movie is mostly allegorical, you shouldn't really take it so literally. In an allegory, everything is symbolic. To me, at least, this story is about the influences a child feels as he is growing up and what mostly shapes him or her into becoming an adult. Kevin became a stronger person due to his own interactions in life rather than his parents' method of upbringing. In the end, he is wiser than they are. He has outgrown them, and there is no need for them anymore.

I know plot wise that can seem harsh, but again, I don't watch this movie and assume that Kevin is an actual person, but he is a symbol of childhood.

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by ghostdog2041 » Mon Nov 5 2012 21:26:26 Flag ▼ | Reply |
IMDb member since March 2006
Post Edited: Tue Nov 6 2012 14:39:30
The boy's parents blew up! Yay! He's an orphan! Hoorah! Haha! Good ole Terry.
Coming Soon... The December Man
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qj7fRpcXRI

It was an ending specifically designed for little boys, which ties in with the main theme of the film.

As an older mainstream viewer, I actually didn't like it.

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The boy's parents blew up! Yay! He's an orphan! Hoorah! Haha! Good ole Terry.

He didn't really wake up to find his parents holding an appliance that contained a piece of Evil©.

As others have said, the film is mostly allegorical, if not all. And I think that the nod from the fireman / Connery is the story telling has that actually, he's still asleep. Also, the smoke going backwards when the end credits roll. The entire film is allegorical.

Be sure to proof your posts to see if you any words out

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Connery is the story telling has that actually, he's still asleep.
I still wonder about that, just like in the original Total Recall, was it real or a dream?

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I think it's wonderful that there was no classic 'happy ending'.

Kevin knew not to touch Evil but his parents went ahead and did it anyway. It shows that grown ups aren't always the smart ones. You do get the feeling that Kevin will be all right, since he's been through the adventure of a lifetime and been exposed to both Good, Evil, and everything in between. Sean Connery winks at him - kid, there's a big world out there and your parents are just holding you back.

Then the film ends and you get George Harrison's happy, upbeat little number.

I don't think any other type of ending would have been better. Terry Gilliam is a fantasist, but also a realist.



"He's making it up as he goes along!"

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[deleted]

What's s disturbing is that the poor child is left alone at the end - even the fireman just drives off and leaves him. What is going to become of him?

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Needed a closing Rod Serling narration before the credits rolled.

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The kicker is the happy music that followed as the credits began to roll in - lol

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I know, right, it's just awful. Poor Kevin.

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If you feel sorry for Kevin, you missed the point of the movie.

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