MovieChat Forums > He Was a Quiet Man (2020) Discussion > This movie is about the Jungle

This movie is about the Jungle


He has a mental disease, his knob is small, he is not smart, his sight is weak, his body is fat, his head is balding, and his nature timid. He is the Omega male.

Bob is a quite man. Stuck in his Goldfish bowl of an office job. The male workers bully him through menial humiliation and females he can never love tease with legal action at his hapless lustfull looks.

Society passes him by as he struggles with the harsh manufactured realities of life in the modern day jungle that is our new animal Kingdom.

He is only too aware that earning your pay check is paramount to survival in the modern wild. After all, we all see people like him out on the streets begging and homeless.

He shows that in the corporate office the omega male is a travesty.

In the office he is bullied, by males, physically, by females, sexually.
At the water cooler he is a social pariah
At home he is criticised for his garden
In his house the morning paper delivery is violent
Even his driving is slow and tentitive, as is his placing in the herd.
He is nothing more than a peripheral feeder
His is a quite man

His one dream in life is the hula girl. The ideal of her is embodied in all girls and through their beauty. Nancy was an angel as her smile lit up a room. In reality she was just as animal and ladder climbing as her lower level alternate. Males need to mate, weather its at a watering hole in the jungle or at the cooler in the office.

His masculinity is in his knowing ability to destroy all that is around him.

He knows he has power in a gun.
In the old jungle, females couldn’t bully him
In the old jungle he could kill the males that bullied him

All animals drink at the water source, a place for peacocks and chest beating, not for the omega male.

When he comes eye to eye with another omega male, it dawns on him that he is not alone. He shares a brief moment of chilling kinsmanship with the first shooter.

He saves the wounded girl. Hes already had his hula dream girl shattered, not again.

He nurses her and falls in love, he learns to live as the alpha male, a glimpse of what could have been. She is the one that takes him out of the wheel chair that that Omega life has so cruelly entrapped him to. The hummingbird is his freedom.

But when he sees it all to start unwind, he understands that though Nancys honesty is absolute and genuine, he will never find love. After all he cannot escape the omega male that which he truly is.

His final act is one of self contention, one of what Nancy couldn’t but wanted to do when she was forced into her wheelchair. Thrown back into his own wheelchair he ended it.

Capitalism is the modern Serengeti, the new jungle law, or our manufactured Darwinism, a constructed society now ruled by laws and strangled by bureaucracy. As in the jungle he is just a cretin as he is in the office. It is time to make way for society by removing the weak to make way for the strong.

This is a snapshot of the jungle that the West has built through capitalism; it is why they snap, why they shoot. An omega Gorilla can’t get a gun and shoot in the jungle, but in the new manufactured Serengeti any monkey can go to wall mart and buy a gun.

It is a deconstruction of society at the peripheral, and he is not the only one. It happens in schools, in the army, at the post office. It is the collapse at the perimeter of our new jungle and in the new jungle the Omega can go out with a bang.

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Very interesting take...

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Very interesting movie....

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Wasn't the woman you refer to as Nancy called Venessa in the movie?

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Tomatoes Tamatoes Asperger's syndrome

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I get what you're saying, hkirklandjones.

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Ha ha ha ha....OK taken

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Brilliant summary.

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Man, that was by far the most insightful observation I have seen in a very long while. We should start a Fight Club!!

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And I'll say that it truly sucks balls that it's come to this. There's no turning back from this blighted state. There is only one solution and that is clearly no solution whatsoever especially if you have children. People have become too apathetic and set in their superficial ways, throwing Jesus and common ethics down the toilet and so on.

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Just saw the movie and read your analysis. Much of it is insightful, most of it is disturbing. Disturbing, maybe, because I'm not ready to deliver such a damning judgement on modern society. I find this classification of alpha beta omega males inaccurate in modern times. In jungle day, it was a rule of Survival of fittest physically, now its more along the lines of survival of the fittest psychologically. Hence, the lines among alpha and omega males aren't as stark. Since I believe in Objectivism I cannot condemn capitalism either, I think true capitalism i.e. discarding unearned in matter and unearned in spirit can help us navigate the rough waters of the concrete jungle. Also, when I saw the movie I kept thinking about the poem 'If' by Rudyard Kipling. Don't know why it came to me but its so suitable, its almost like an antidote to the doom and gloom of the movie.

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So besides your analysis of the modern world (which I would fully sign by myself), what do you think: is all of this a dream, or did it really happen? Maybe shooting himself when actually facing.. who? Paula? While Venessa is sitting at home in her weel chair?

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when i read an assertion such as "this movie was about...", i tend to think an at least mildly intelligent person has something meaningful and insightful to say...boy was i wrong.

this is one of the most incoherent and contrived analyses i've ever read. this isn't even film school drop-out level material.

i'm fairly certain this guy never graduated high school which makes this all the more ironic since he's belting on about social darwinism. i wonder how much he makes when he can't even spell "whether" correctly.

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Omega

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well i was very impressed with the op post
...but i am stoned


i'd like to hear his take on cmi5's question: how much of it was in his mind?

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Interesting analogy. At first I thought you were going to assert that you were going to compare this plotline to The Jungle by Upton Sinclair, but as I read, I was like... I don't see it! Then I realized you were referring to the jungle as in an actual jungle as a social hierarchy/structure. Like I said, interesting.

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