The
movie has two distinct parts to it, the dream state and reality. These two continue to mix between one
another and become difficult to separate especially towards the end. In the beginning, when it is clearly
the dream or reality, one can see that the pipes are throughout the entire
movie. The pipes are silver,
ribbed, and old in contrast to what modern day pipes would have looked like in
that time. The idea of the pipes
being on the outsides showed that everything is exposed, nothing is hiding, it
is all in the open for us to see.
These
pipes seem to haunt Sam throughout the movie in many different ways. To begin with, his air conditioner
breaks down and the company cannot come and repair it right away. The pipes are weaving between the
walls, and the colors blending into the walls making it hard to differentiate
one pipe from the next. As the
movie unfolds and he begins to lose his sanity, his pipes lose their
composition as well. The pipes
unravel, they are taken apart, and they explode in his apartment because of the
mechanics wonderful maintenance job.
While
the difficulty is occurring with the pipes, Sam is continuously being haunted
in his dreams by a large, metallic monster. This monster resembles the pipes and disaster he is facing
in his life. On a larger scale,
the monster is one big pipe that Sam must overcome. To begin, we see the monster haunting Sam, unable to defend
himself but just continuously haunting him from dream to dream. At the last dream, we witness Sam
crushing the monster in his dream.
The
lighting on the pipes is dim, dark never well lit. The colors of the pipes never seem to change from place to
place. In Sam’s apartment they are
gray and dim and even in the work place they continue to be dark and grim. But in contrast, the monster is decorated
in shining “armor” or just a cleaner pipe the kind of pipe that would be assume
could be replaced like in the commercial in the opening scene. One can notice that this light on the
monster shows that we need to pay attention to it and must notice it. The pipes, since they are muted, seem
to fall away in the scenes and are not brought out; they fall away and blend in
with the rest of the gray, bland walls.
These
pipes continuously seem to become more and more confusing as to how they work
throughout the movie. Their appearance
first begins and plain, simple.
One would assume they are just air ducts, flowing hot or cold air from
one room to the next because they don’t move, they are attached to the walls
where we would expect them to be, but at the end of the movie, they are woven
together, sparking, being crushed.
This makes them hard to focus on and confusing us. While all the pipes intertwine, they
seem to be larger becoming one, unified pipe. This unified pipe can also be thought of as the pipe monster
in Sam’s dream.
You make some good points with this blog. The pipes were a motif that I did not notice through the film. It makes sense looking back on it now. I wondered why they made a big deal about ducts at the beginning of the film. Also Mr. Tuttle, who I cannot tell is part of Sam's imagination or not, works with piping. In Sam's dreams he himself is wearing a metal suit with metal wings maybe also referencing piping again. Looking back on it now, it seems kind of goofy to have something like pipes be a big part of the film but this film was goofy itself.
ReplyDeleteI'm right there with you – the ducts absolutely stood out to me throughout the movie. However, I did not make the connection between the ducts and the monster in Sam's recurring dream! And I especially like this link you've made. The ducts are right at the center of Sam's problems, as they are what initially gets him in trouble with the ministry. They're also very menacing in their appearance, jutting out of any available wall space, so Sam imagining them as a monster doesn't seem so farfetched. I would even argue that they're a sort of symbol representing the ministry, something which makes Sam's feat against that robot particularly satisfying (however delusory). Who knew these ducts would be as important as that charming telemarketer made them out to be!
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