Two Days One Night Analysis

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According to Jonathan Murray’s article titled “Two Days, One Night”, in one recent promotional interview, for example, Jean-Pierre Dardenne argues that he wanted to show how this woman, without realizing it, manages to inspire a solidarity that was completely lost in the workplace. Sandra's fear of losing her job inspired within her a newfound faith in herself and in the force of solidarity. The ability of people to stand together and support each other instead of favoring monetary gain enables her to feel happy because together she and her husband “put up a good fight”.
Frequently within the film, The Dardenne brothers establishes an entryway that isolates Sandra and whomever she talks with. At different times, when Sandra's coworkers are responsive to her supplication, the Dardennes still utilize a physical hindrance, for example, a low fence or a desk, yet they scarcely keep it in the frame. In these examples, the literal hindrance becomes less important than the figurative barrier, as the allegorical divider between Sandra and her coworker descends. The Dardenne Brothers utilize this procedure to make effective shots which …show more content…

The opening and closing scenes both involve a cell phone, and Sandra physically alone. The Dardenne brothers present a visual rhyme between these two scenes to be blatantly stark and deliberate. At last, Two Days, One Night is successful in its plan to depict with caring realism the battle of work in this present reality where no snippets of weakness are

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