Everything Will Be OK
Everything Will Be OK
| 10 January 2006 (USA)
Everything Will Be OK Trailers

A series of dark and troubling events forces Bill to reckon with the meaning of his life… or lack thereof.

Similar Movies to Everything Will Be OK
Reviews
Horst in Translation ([email protected])

Californian Academy Award nominee Don Hertzfeldt wrote, directed and narrated this 16-minute movie 10 years ago when he was around 30. It's maybe his fastest movie, especially in the first half where Hertzfeldt is constantly speaking pretty much without a break. It's absolutely spot-on , down to the smallest detail. The references he mentions may seem random at first, but if you think about it, it all makes sense. Unfortunately, you will miss the next three sentences if you think about it, so this film definitely deserves more than one watch. I have to say, going only by the first half I may have rated this a 10. The second half is inferior, but it's still pretty good. I guess after watching this, it's safe for me to say that Hertzfeldt is my favorite animation director right now and I am totally looking forward to his next films. I hope there will be many more to come and I am positive that he could also come up with a truly awesome live action movie as he has proved on so many occasions in his short films that he possesses great perception about the human soul. His animation style is very unique. But there is also a raw truth to his films, an approach that I have not seen in anybody else's work. Apart from that, Hertzfeldt of course also has an amazing voice as a narrator. Everything will be okay, but this film will be just great if you decide to watch it what I hope you will because otherwise you are truly missing out. Highly recommended.

... View More
GoneWithTheTwins

From giant fish heads to deformed birds to manatees attacking cities, the bizarre and the unexplainable all frequent the films of Don Herzfeldt. In his most artistic and abstract film, (winning the Sundance Film Festival's Short Film-making Award) Everything Will Be OK, he channels his fevered genius into the story of Bill, a man lost in the exasperation of existence.The film is narrated completely by Bill, a lonely and exhausted man who walks through a parking lot, chats with neighbors, grocery store clerks and his ex-girlfriend - but mostly he contemplates his chaotic dreams and the hallucinations he kids himself he doesn't have. Chronicling several days in his life, from his preoccupation with death to his recovery in a hospital, Everything Will Be OK promises just that.I have a theory about opera music; and that is that tying any operatic pieces to a film magically and automatically makes it more poignant, thought-provoking and deep. Herzfeldt does this with masterly care and it makes the most awkward and dissonant moments more dramatic and powerful. From Bill gazing at a torn plastic bag flapping in the breeze on the end of a broken pole, to quietly sucking blood from the corner of a sore in his mouth, the calming sounds of opera voices grants us time to take in his abstract visions and actions and appreciate them as art. But is it art? Occasionally, or perhaps frequently, the images and voices that narrate the few days in Bill's life are so disjointed, so appallingly random, and most of all shockingly off-putting that the average viewer might not find the meaning behind it all. And perhaps this is what Herzfeldt wanted. Regardless of the hidden themes and purposeful hectic imagery, humor is always prevalent in Everything Will Be OK. Whether or not that humor is your cup of tea is really dependent on how much humor you unearth from the morbidity of death, mental sickness and the monotony of life. The sporadic nature of his jokes, from Bill dreaming of throwing dead bodies out of a tiny boat to his experiencing the sudden inability to control his bladder, is oftentimes enough to jolt a giggle from the audience. At other times, the dire seriousness of attacking his mother or having his own thoughts drowned out by stinging voices in his mind, are enough to reattach ourselves to the realities Herzfeldt portrays.The animation Herzfeldt uses is the kind that wobbles and wiggles on screen, due to the individual drawings not lining up completely. The character designs themselves are ridiculously simple, practically to the point of stick figures, but this gives the artist time to concentrate on the creative aspects of his animation. Using black and white masks to reveal only portions of the screen, mostly off-centered or with multiple windows of activities occurring simultaneously, Everything Will Be OK unfolds at a fast pace and presents much of the confusion Bill experiences just as chaotically for the audience. The simplicity of the art itself aids the idea that the story is universally approachable, although not necessarily universally coherent.Commenting on the themes of life, death, mental deterioration and the repetition of dull everyday life, Bill's adventures, which cover seemingly unadventurous events, sees him journey from one average day through to the brink of extinction, and then back again to the sameness he may never be content with. The final scene in which he rides a bus in the rain once again slows with the introduction of serene opera voices, which leaves us, whether understanding his journey or not, with a sense of satisfaction.Mike Massie

... View More
MartinHafer

This film was included in THE ANIMATION SHOW VOLUME THREE--a compilation of short films arranged by Don Hertzfeldt and Mike Judge. Overall, this is a very impressive DVD--and much of it is due to CITY PARADISE.Even for Don Hertzfeldt, this is a super-strange short film!! While it is not funny like the films you find on Volume One, it is so incredibly creative and bizarre that it's also quite compelling.EVERYTHING IS O.K. is a surreal stream of consciousness which features the usual Hertzfeldt stick men drawings. However, instead of violence (which we love) in this film, it's more about a guy who's going crazy. He's either got schizophrenia or a brain tumor (more likely) and you see through the course of this film as he looses his mind. What I particularly liked was his use of multiple screens to show how this sick man perceives the world. Some may find it all quite funny--I just found it strangely compelling.

... View More
geoffingeorgia

This is one of the most amazing films ever. It grabs you quickly by using Hertzfeld's charming (and disarming) stick-figure style, makes you laugh at (protagonist) Bill's simple social flubs, that progress into something much darker and more real. More important and desperate.If you or a close loved one have ever thought you might be going mad, it will certainly touch raw nerves, drawing you into Bill's confusion, helplessness, feelings of inadequacy and depression. No small feat for stick figures. I am someone who gets totally absorbed in movies and must admit I was moved to tears at more than one viewing (I was fortunate enough to see this on a large screen at two separate film festivals and finally ordered my own copy from Bitterfilms.com, the only source for DVD's of the film).In my defense I was not alone, I paid special attention to listen to other patrons. It was amazing to watch a whole theater so quickly laughing and then to be moved just as quickly to sympathy by what are in essence line drawings. I struggle to think of another animator who can so readily evoke such feelings. Perhaps Adam Benjmin Eliot's black & white claymation comes close.Those familiar with Hertzfeldt's earlier work might notice a similar emotional pattern to "Meaning of Life" in it's building intensity that rises to a deafening, maddening din, only to take a long silent reflective pause towards the end, before returning to the original story. Much like the musical structure of many classical operas.Likewise it shares "Meaning"'s use of many beautiful "in-camera" effects to awe inspiring ends. By various method of folding, crumbling, burning, staining and otherwise distressing the paper that the animations are being produced on, Bill's whole world is shown to crumble around him, both in his reality and ours.I don't think there is one frame of this that isn't completely enjoyable. The editing keeps us constantly looking to another area of the screen to catch up, and I don't think there's one shot where we see the entire screen filled with one image, further showing the frantic thoughts of our hero.For some reason one of the images that sticks with me is what (I imagine) is footage of rain on a black garbage bag. Another is of an rubber pig, hand puppet filmed out of focus.Fans of animation will like this easily, but I've already made new fans of other friends who are are almost film snobs and normally wouldn't choose to watch what they call, with a noticeably condescending tone, "Cartoons".I can't wait to see what Hertzfeld does next

... View More