The Stupidity of Miles Bron, Explained

Ойын-сауық

Miles Bron is a silly man. For realsies.
Support my Amazing Goated Vids: / pillarofgarbage
Make a difference with TabForTrees: tabfortrees.org/pillarofgarbage
Join the Pillar of Garbage Discord server! / discord
Follow me on Twitter! / pillargarbage
TikTok: / pillar_of_garbage
I'm on Mastodon: mas.to/@PillarOfGarbage
Second channel: / @quone
#glassonion #knivesout #videoessay
Timestamps:
0:00 Introduction
0:58 A brief timeline
2:49 Idiocy and variance
5:27 Stupidity and specificity
8:27 Conclusion
Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (titled onscreen as simply Glass Onion) is a 2022 American mystery film written and directed by Rian Johnson and produced by Johnson and Ram Bergman. It is the sequel to the 2019 film Knives Out, with Daniel Craig reprising his role as master detective Benoit Blanc as he takes on a new case revolving around a tech billionaire and his old friends. The ensemble cast includes Edward Norton, Janelle Monáe, Kathryn Hahn, Leslie Odom Jr., Jessica Henwick, Madelyn Cline, Kate Hudson, and Dave Bautista. In Glass Onion, tech billionaire Miles Bron invites his friends for a getaway on his private Greek island. When someone turns up dead, Detective Benoit Blanc is put on the case.

Пікірлер: 824

  • @PillarofGarbage
    @PillarofGarbage Жыл бұрын

    Pay me to stop making Glass Onion videos: www.patreon.com/pillarofgarbage

  • @Violn95

    @Violn95

    Жыл бұрын

    Well it's a good thing I'm broke! Don't stop!

  • @TheAmityElf

    @TheAmityElf

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, "Buy my silence!"

  • @riversong4997

    @riversong4997

    Жыл бұрын

    Lmao

  • @fds7476

    @fds7476

    Жыл бұрын

    We do not negotiate with blackmailers.

  • @realMacMadame

    @realMacMadame

    Жыл бұрын

    I love for these videos

  • @benwasserman8223
    @benwasserman8223 Жыл бұрын

    I think Miles is a good PR guy- that’s his biggest strength. The self-confidence in saying nonsense like you mean it, though in every other department he comes up short.

  • @PillarofGarbage

    @PillarofGarbage

    Жыл бұрын

    the irony being if he could ever look accurately at himself, he'd realise that his ridiculous self-confidence is unearned

  • @daelen.cclark

    @daelen.cclark

    Жыл бұрын

    He’s an idiot, and he’s a determined and overly wealthy idiot. (The worst kind.)

  • @florismalipaard4969

    @florismalipaard4969

    Жыл бұрын

    So he's elon musk

  • @espalier

    @espalier

    Жыл бұрын

    @@florismalipaard4969 or the orange goblin.

  • @SamanthaLain

    @SamanthaLain

    Жыл бұрын

    @@espalier he's a lot of people

  • @Anergyne
    @Anergyne Жыл бұрын

    "He fooled Andi and killed her" feels like a weird argument because people don't expect to get murdered. Even by your former business partner who just stabbed you in the back. "This guy I've known for years might kill me, I shouldn't let him into my home" is just not a thing most people consider, and I genuinely pity people who do live their lives like that. Fooling Andi and killing her didn't take genius. It simply took Andi not being absolutely paranoid.

  • @peterolson146

    @peterolson146

    Жыл бұрын

    Not only Andi not being paranoid, it took Miles violating hospitality rules and cold heartedly murdering someone who used to be his best friend. In other cultures his actions are particularly despicable; he poisoned her as she hosted him! She made him tea!

  • @joshwhite5730

    @joshwhite5730

    Жыл бұрын

    @@peterolson146 isn’t it still evil no matter what culture it is

  • @bluexephosfan970

    @bluexephosfan970

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joshwhite5730 oh yeah murder is always fucked, but in many cultures there is a strong rule of hospitality that demands all hostilities be put aside while hosting or being hosted. If you absolutely must murder them, don't do it while at their place for tea, yanno? This is a key plot point in ancient stories like the Odyssey, for example

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep. One of his big talents is being extremely casually unethical. Just so extremely out of line it's hard to predict how far he'll go because most people aren't anywhere near that awful.

  • @philsurtees

    @philsurtees

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bluexephosfan970 It's America. Aside from all the other murders and violent crimes, there's an average of more than one mass shooting per day. There are so many that you only hear about the really bad ones. They have 25% of the world's prisoners. It's an uncivilised $h1thole. Somehow, I think they're beyond hosting etiquette - any etiquette at all, frankly - when it comes to murder...

  • @Trockenmatt
    @Trockenmatt Жыл бұрын

    All of his moments of being "smart" are just him having an incredible charisma. It doesn't take technical know-how to get someone set up at Twitch, it just takes knowing the right people and connecting them.. It doesn't take a mathematical genius to get someone elected to city council, it just takes knowing what to say. It doesn't take a genius to play it cool when someone you thought you murdered shows up at your party, it just takes a cool head. That's what Miles is. In D&D terms, he has a Charisma of 18 and an Intelligence of 8.

  • @jenniferhunter4074

    @jenniferhunter4074

    Жыл бұрын

    He's an opportunist. It's just basic thinking that takes advantage of opportunities. You can see it in the scene where the scientist guy asks "You didn't burn it?" and you see the look on Mile's face.. and voila... he gets his lighter out and he burns the stupid napkin He's always stealing other people's skills. I thought that was hilarious. I loved Edward Norton's acting because you could see "the character" thinking "oh, let me do that". We all do this in a sense. Does anyone really highlight when a store screws up the pricing? No. we just go all in. We'll play the "but it says this" game. To the point that stores pushed for a get out of jail card legislation and the "price match" is always with specific competitors and not the warehouse retailer. when Napster was a thing, people just used the app and they didn't care about the cost and I sincerely doubt they cared about the ethics of the system. They just wanted to get some music. Miles just understands how to manipulate and cash in on people. He's got animal instincts. Lots of people have those instincts. We couldn't function as a social group if we couldn't lie. This is just basic humanity 101. Miles has a lot going for him. He's white. He's a male. He's not ugly or unattractive. That really is the bar he had to pass. Then, a few token successes and the illusion begins. Miles is "successful" because of perception. People play along with the game. Monkey see monkey do. Then, people will play along unconsciously because of their own animal instincts as humans. It's just group dynamics and we can show the studies to prove how susceptible people are to group peer pressure. The anti-sjw crowd is a clear exhibition of this with their conformist behavior that somehow, turns into them using the same trite debunked arguments of their masters. You can tell that group is a bunch of dolls just regurgitating something they thought sounded clever. I remember when they babbled about the bomber run scene in TLJ and they all said the same thing. The other side said "magnets? " as an explanation for why they "fell". It wasn't hard to think up a plausible explanation for why these bombs with red lights went to the big ship to go boom. However, sometimes, you put your critical thinking non-conformist brain on and then that person will take a big step back and they start asking those prime questions such as "Is this true" and they go back to the beginning. Think of atheists such as myself. Former Christian. Believed that religion's "truth". AT some point, reality gave me too many discrepancies and I had to look. I didn't go into the investigation expecting to be an atheist. I genuinely thought that I would prove my religion was true. The joke was on me. I came out and said " How was I so stupid as to fall for this obvious bs?" (Of course, being indoctrinated since birth and living in a religious culture bubble, there were reasons I didn't have to look at this thing. When I did... suddenly, garden of eden is a metaphor and the knot of religion gets un-knotted.) It takes a lot of energy and practice and just general knowledge to get to that point. That way, you hear a guy on youtube. He sounds nice. 5 videos in, he says something stupid that you catch because you understand that topic. Suddenly, you start re-evaluating the content and go "Maybe not for me". One of the interesting experiments to prove that we aren't as "independent rugged non-conformists" is the Asch tests. We're all vulnerable to this kind of group dynamic. We're a social species. We're not lone wolves. We're cuddly bald monkeys with brains. We're not even as scary as monkeys. We're like bald cuddly sheep. baa-baa.

  • @daelen.cclark

    @daelen.cclark

    Жыл бұрын

    He’s a promoter/marketing guy.

  • @jeremypnet

    @jeremypnet

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jenniferhunter4074 all very good. The only flaw is that the bomber scene in TLJ really was truly stupid.

  • @loxodoncyclotis1823

    @loxodoncyclotis1823

    Жыл бұрын

    He also scores pretty low on Wisdom. After all not everyone has the ability to transform other peoples' lives and help them reach their full potential like he does, he could've been content with that and made a great career out of it. But no, he had to fall for his own hype and try to cast himself as some kind of modern Da Vinci.

  • @TheBlackCloakedMan

    @TheBlackCloakedMan

    Жыл бұрын

    Charisma? He did with money. That's what you need to accomplish all these things. Yes, he became incredibly wealthy afterwards, but he clearly came from money. Like Elon Musk.

  • @onearmedbandit84
    @onearmedbandit84 Жыл бұрын

    I don't think the fact Johnson wrote the film during the 2020 pandemic, two whole years before the rise of Andrew Tate and Elon Musk's Twitter saga, gets enough credit.

  • @daelen.cclark

    @daelen.cclark

    Жыл бұрын

    Even if he didn't write it during the pandemic, he at least understood what it was like at the time.

  • @YumLemmingKebabs

    @YumLemmingKebabs

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean, Tate didn't "Rise" in 2022. He just fell in 2022. He was rising the whole time. Most people just hadn't heard of him before he got arrested because he's such a niche weirdo.

  • @Di7manya

    @Di7manya

    Жыл бұрын

    Elon Musk's Twitter saga only broadcasted his dumbness, but his reputation as a "genius" and how stupid he really is was well-known by then. At the very start of the pandemic he "predicted" that covid cases in the US would be zero by May 2020 for example.

  • @ManticTRIGGER

    @ManticTRIGGER

    Жыл бұрын

    @@YumLemmingKebabs I know you are wrong but I'm to lazy to explain so fuck it you are right

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    @@YumLemmingKebabs Tate is hugely influential - just mostly to teenage boys.

  • @chandlermiller3944
    @chandlermiller3944 Жыл бұрын

    Sending Andi the invitation box is actually the dumbest thing miles did. He could have not sent her a box because of the bad blood and then he never would have been put under scrutiny by the world's greatest detective. In magic this is called over proving. He's trying to hard to prove he didn't do it which then adds to the suspicions instead of taking away from them. He literally invited his own demise to the island.

  • @blackbot7113

    @blackbot7113

    Жыл бұрын

    Given the timeline the box designer must've been hired long before the murder. I imagine actually building them also takes time, so to me it makes sense that he ordered the box for Andi BEFORE he killed her. In my mind, there are three options: * He didn't include her initially, then killed her and ordered a box for her afterwards. Would be super suspicious. * He killed her and THEN ordered all the boxes. The time frame seems to short for this to be feasible. * He included her in the order, then killed her and didn't bother cancelling the order. Seems the most likely to me. But I don't think the movie confirms it either way, right?

  • @rottensquid

    @rottensquid

    Жыл бұрын

    @@blackbot7113 Right. The whole point of inviting her was to prove he didn't know she was dead. And it's exactly what you describe, the "proof" that's actually an aberration in his behavior, making it look more suspicious than if he'd done nothing. But when he learned about the envelope, he had to act fast. So he must have come up with the whole murder mystery idea after the murder, and sent the box before Andi's death was publicly announced. It's not a lot of time to have it constructed, but presumably, with enough money, all things are possible.

  • @silversonome5360

    @silversonome5360

    8 ай бұрын

    guys he only has a fax machine in his home he couldn't have called the box designer to cancel Andi's box

  • @lnsflare1

    @lnsflare1

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@silversonome5360I mean, he could have faxed them, but then that would involve the designer having written evidence that a box intended for a famous murder victim was stopped before the murder was publicly revealed.

  • @abigfavor
    @abigfavor Жыл бұрын

    Imagine lowering the bar of intelligence to not admitting you killed someone or trying to kill her in front of everyone on the beach. It makes me feel bigly smart

  • @PillarofGarbage

    @PillarofGarbage

    Жыл бұрын

    we must be gods to them

  • @artisticcannibalism1350

    @artisticcannibalism1350

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PillarofGarbage I knew it!

  • @soccerandtrack10

    @soccerandtrack10

    Жыл бұрын

    In lame man's terms,we call it screaming at the top of your lungs because of reality and the 1 yelling physically can't admit reality is real because they're to insecure.

  • @capsey_

    @capsey_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@soccerandtrack10 poor layman was just called lame

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    @@soccerandtrack10 what?

  • @octochan
    @octochan Жыл бұрын

    There's another example you probably could have added to your argument about how Miles overestimates himself - that he thinks he successfully seduced Whiskey away from Duke, and that Duke doesn't know about it. He probably thought he was being real slick, filling his penthouse with roses

  • @PillarofGarbage

    @PillarofGarbage

    Жыл бұрын

    Great point!

  • @axlm.808

    @axlm.808

    Жыл бұрын

    On the other hand, everybody think Whiskey is just a dumb bimbo girl. But she's way smarter than she looks and uses both Duke and Miles to her own benefits

  • @TJ52359

    @TJ52359

    Жыл бұрын

    with Whiskey , -- didn't they imply that he'd been at a Party with/for her a few weeks earlier -- she tells Andi/Helen that she's looking to move away from Duke's "Brand" because she has her own goals which they might hinder -- Duke's lifestyle practically screams 'Here for a Good time, not a long Time"... how long has he been with Whiskey? How Long would he have been? How many other Whiskeys have there been since Miles joined the group? It's wholly possible he'd been positioning himself as her rebound Sugar-daddy since the second time she accompanied Duke somewhere

  • @camipco

    @camipco

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TJ52359 Yes, but the point is that Duke isn't oblivious to that, and Miles isn't outsmarting Duke using Whiskey as a pawn. Whiskey and Duke and Miles are all engaged in a power shuffle, for sure, as are the rest of the shitheads with Miles, but Miles isn't playing it at some higher level.

  • @TJ52359

    @TJ52359

    Жыл бұрын

    @@camipco oh no doubt it's a three sided Chess Game... but as I read @Octo Chan's comment they were citing Miles' hook up with Whiskey as more of a 'The stripper really liked me." (no offense to Whiskey) kind of stupid, rather than simply being outplayed by either/both of them... -- and with as many past Whiskeys as there have no doubt been, how many Did Miles run game on (successfully, or not) after Duke was done with them so he's probably got a history of 'some' success upon which to base his delusion...

  • @EtruskenRaider
    @EtruskenRaider Жыл бұрын

    The obvious answer is that Miles was already rich when he met the shitheads, he just wasn’t insanely rich until Alpha. His clothes are too nice in the flashbacks. He provided the initial cash investments and introductions.

  • @GoneZombie
    @GoneZombie Жыл бұрын

    I'm also kinda shocked by how many people seem to think Miles' initial murder of Andi was by some kind of undetectable poison. He just dosed her with sleeping pills and left her in the garage with the car running. Helen explains it out loud in the film. He's capable of functioning and planning, but he's not a genius and it was a stupid thing to do.

  • @hurricaneofcats

    @hurricaneofcats

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah as far as murder methods go it's not the most surefire way to kill someone. The pills could wear off. Someone could find and revive her or it simply couldn't work for a dozen reasons. People are acting like he gave her cyanide or something.

  • @Rime_in_Retrograde
    @Rime_in_Retrograde Жыл бұрын

    I didn't realize people thought Miles's characterization was inconsistent, but that might be because I know someone like Miles in real life - charismatic with a lot of initiative, constantly looking for ways to "get rich quick", often fall for their own hype, and good at using other people's ideas but not at coming up with their own🤷🏻‍♀

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    I've met a few too. Do you think it's possible some of the audience are falling for Miles' confidence man persona? They've literally bought in to a fictional character's sales pitch? If so I do not envy these people - that's a level of meta sucker I have trouble even comprehending.

  • @erin_3569

    @erin_3569

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@shraka I mean, there's still people praising Elon Musk's intelligence even after he lost billions with his gestion of twitter

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    @@erin_3569 That's very true.

  • @lnsflare1

    @lnsflare1

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@erin_3569You have to remember, "Donald Trump" is more a class of mental disorders (namely narcissism, megalomania, inferiority complex, substance abuse, breeding kink, and several truckloads of daddy issues, to begin with) than he is a person, and Elon Musk (and Miles) is a terminal patient.

  • @11ldevendrakumaragrawal27

    @11ldevendrakumaragrawal27

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@erin_3569yes you could say writers had predicted the trend

  • @MarioGMan25
    @MarioGMan25 Жыл бұрын

    There's a few bits like where he seems to think Helen is Andi's ghost, considering that strange shoulder touch. That and he was utterly surprised by the Helen reveal, meaning he never thought of a twin even after Duke showed him that Andi was dead.

  • @snarkysmalltalk1349

    @snarkysmalltalk1349

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes I just realized that the last time I rewatched it. The shoulder touch just seemed so strange I knew it had to mean something. He was definitely thinking she might be a ghost.

  • @brokencandy1797

    @brokencandy1797

    Жыл бұрын

    I assumed that he assumed that Andi had somehow survived the attempted poisoning and was scared of if and when she would call him out. He can't ask because he can't admit that he has any reason to not expect her to be alive.

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    You can justify anything in the film being true if you think touching someone’s shoulder constitutes them believing in ghosts…

  • @RictusHolloweye

    @RictusHolloweye

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-NameName - Touching the shoulder of someone he thought was a dead person returned. Were you not aware of the rest of the relevant information?

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RictusHolloweye That doesn’t immediately mean that he believes in ghosts. It’s a blatant non sequitur.

  • @mikaylaeager7942
    @mikaylaeager7942 Жыл бұрын

    Miles is at the very peak of Mount Stupid on the Dunning-Kruger chart. He's not entirely incompetent but he is exorbitantly over confident. Anyone can fall into this trap but it is particularly common among highly privileged, broadly educated white men. Miles is that guy who tries to lecture you on biology or economics based on one gen-ed course and "common sense," and you don't bother to correct him despite having a degree in both topics because you know just enough to know how little you actually know about two extremely complicated and constantly evolving fields of study.

  • @slowCPU

    @slowCPU

    Жыл бұрын

    Dunno why you brought race into that but go off queen

  • @mikaylaeager7942

    @mikaylaeager7942

    Жыл бұрын

    @@slowCPU I brought race into it because in the study I’m referencing men that belonged to other racial groups did not have the same level of overestimating their own competence. Saying men generally would be inaccurately representing the results of the study.

  • @slowCPU

    @slowCPU

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mikaylaeager7942 k

  • @MasteringJohn

    @MasteringJohn

    Жыл бұрын

    Stupidity and arrogance are human universals, not racial or sociological particulars.

  • @mikaylaeager7942

    @mikaylaeager7942

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MasteringJohn That’s why I said anyone can fall into this trap, some demographics are just more susceptible because of their experience and socialization.

  • @dr.strangelove2066
    @dr.strangelove2066 Жыл бұрын

    Seeing again up close the email Andi sent to the shitheads totally dispels the supposed inconsistency of "why did she let Miles into her house, he was obviously gonna kill her! Such a bad movie!" because she literally invited them all to come! "You all know where to find me." Why would she expect anyone to kill her when they showed up to her front door because she was expecting them to come. And they all did come!

  • @michaelsinger4638

    @michaelsinger4638

    Жыл бұрын

    Also Miles killing her himself after driving his own car over to her house after they were in the middle of a public bitter legal case, when he was supposed to be living overseas. It’s such a stupid thing to do that Andi probably never guessed he’d be foolish enough to actually do it.

  • @eomoran

    @eomoran

    Жыл бұрын

    Except she didn’t send the email to miles.

  • @eomoran

    @eomoran

    Жыл бұрын

    @@michaelsinger4638 exactly, she was so smart she got killed, yknow, as opposed to just letting her be arrogant

  • @peterolson146

    @peterolson146

    Жыл бұрын

    @@eomoran miles doesn’t have email that’s why Leslie Odom Jr faxes it to him. Andi knew someone would share it with him

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    “She was so clever that she died.”

  • @amandac.s.9452
    @amandac.s.9452 Жыл бұрын

    I always interpreted Miles lack of reaction to "Andi" showing up in the island was that he thought his plan failed and Andi survived. After all, it's well established that the actual murder itself was very hands off, and the news of Andi's death hadn't broken. He had no way of knowing whether or not his plan worked!! He was surprised, upset, and nervous!

  • @ludwigamadeushaydn706

    @ludwigamadeushaydn706

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem even then is that the movie never even attempts to imply what he thought was going on.

  • @gaileverett

    @gaileverett

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ludwigamadeushaydn706 I don't see that as a problem. The movie wants us to believe he's smarter than he really is. If It had been absolutely clear what he was thinking at that moment, a lot of suspense would have been lost.

  • @ludwigamadeushaydn706

    @ludwigamadeushaydn706

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gaileverett I mean that at some point it would have been nice to find out.

  • @OK-yy6qz

    @OK-yy6qz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gaileverett a mystery movie doesn't work if there's no logical way for the viewer to arrive at the same conclusion as the characters.

  • @Nao-uy6mj

    @Nao-uy6mj

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ludwigamadeushaydn706 You kind of do though. When he sees her on the island for the first time, he weirdly touches her shoulder, almost like he's looking at a ghost. I honestly don't think he thought that far into the future, he probably didn't have too many concrete theory of what was happening and decided to "put the ball in her court." Or since he'd already took Duke's gun beforehand, he'd already planned on using the lights situation to kill Helen just to make sure she stayed dead. That's the thing about him though, is he's stupid and doesn't think about the consequences of his actions more than one step ahead.

  • @nrpbrown
    @nrpbrown Жыл бұрын

    Honestly Miles is a great example of why confidence is so important and at the same time so dangerous when left unchecked.

  • @cidevant002
    @cidevant002 Жыл бұрын

    I feel like you keep missing the fact that Miles didn't know for sure that Andie was dead when he first saw Helen. He could have imagined that she survived somehow, some neighbor helped her out or something and he only had a clear idea when Duke showed him the news. It's only after he took care of Duke (the only witness that could put him at the time when Andie died at the place), only then he took care of Helen (the one obviously trying to uncover him). If Duke HAVEN'T shown him his phone and the news of Andie's death, Miles probably wouldn't have done anything to him.

  • @Braddicusfinch

    @Braddicusfinch

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think he did miss this, pretty sure he stated this as a rebuttal to The Critical Drinker video in his video response

  • @cidevant002

    @cidevant002

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Braddicusfinch Even if he did on that video, he didn't on this one. He talks like Miles knew from the very start that Helen was an imposter.

  • @Braddicusfinch

    @Braddicusfinch

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cidevant002 I disagree, though there certainly is room to come to the conclusion you did. To me, it was more the idea that Miles would be shocked to see "Andi" alive because his hubris would not allow him to think his plan failed

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Braddicusfinch I think it's more like he is pathologically two faced, and dumb. He was confused - didn't know how Andi was there, even touched her because he thought she might be a ghost - but was instinctively confidant on the surface because that's how he operates. I've seen people who do this; charismatic and confidant as all hell then you find out later they have NO IDEA what is going on. I honestly think he was STILL confused after Duke showed him the video. I don't think he understood the implication because later he's surprised that it wasn't actually Andi, he's just being blackmailed so he's gonna kill the guy blackmailing him and go kill Andi again.

  • @lnsflare1

    @lnsflare1

    24 күн бұрын

    He was probably very confused as to how come he wasn't being arrested for attempted murder if Andi was still alive and mentally competent after she saw him drug her and then she woke up in our was rescued from a staged suicide.

  • @hugoCastellnaos
    @hugoCastellnaos Жыл бұрын

    Miles didn't think Andy was a fake, but that she was able to survive the first atatck.

  • @dr.braxygilkeycruises1460
    @dr.braxygilkeycruises1460 Жыл бұрын

    Love this video!!! Miles is indeed dumb. Though it isn't mentioned, notice when Miles pulls Benoit into the Glass Onion to ask why he's there, *Benoit TELLS him, "maybe someone reset the box."* It is at that point we see Miles *adopt that thought and restate it as if HE Is The One Who Originated The Idea!*

  • @tarvoc746

    @tarvoc746

    Жыл бұрын

    Miles is definitely really good at stealing ideas and then selling them as his own.

  • @flyingfireballmaster1816

    @flyingfireballmaster1816

    Жыл бұрын

    That was the moment I began to question Miles’ intelligence. Given how confused he was at Blanc’s arrival, I just assumed resetting the box was impossible because otherwise any normal person would have figured that’s what happened. It seemed really odd that he had to have someone else suggest that before he even considered it. It was kind of a perfect moment. Like everyone in the movie, I made a bad assumption based on the idea that Miles was a genius.

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Жыл бұрын

    I love how every previous Edward Norton character is the smartest person in the room. He's also a member of MENSA in real life. Miles just THINKS that he's crafty and intellectual, but he is woefully mistaken.

  • @rizahawkeyepierce1380

    @rizahawkeyepierce1380

    Жыл бұрын

    Stupid characters are often played by very smart actors. The kid who played Luke on Modern Family is a member of MENSA as well.

  • @LocseryuOfficial

    @LocseryuOfficial

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rizahawkeyepierce1380 it takes a smart man to act dumb

  • @randomnerd3402

    @randomnerd3402

    Жыл бұрын

    He played a bit of a pretentious dumbass in Birdman

  • @animeotaku307

    @animeotaku307

    Жыл бұрын

    Irony as cast. Same with Bautista; he is vocal about his opposition to the alt-right IRL.

  • @mikejeffries3333

    @mikejeffries3333

    Жыл бұрын

    @@animeotaku307 I think there's also something fun/intriguing (for pretty much anyone working on a piece of media) about becoming or making a villain-if you can make them interesting or entertaining, even if they are basically an embodiment of everything you disagree with, it can be fun to explore these characters. I know that I really like writing villains, and I imagine that actors can have some fun playing these awful people-it's like getting to explore something that you'll never do otherwise.

  • @samuelbarber6177
    @samuelbarber6177 Жыл бұрын

    Thing is, the pineapple juice wouldn’t normally be that stupid, considering that if Duke’s blood had been analysed and some poison had been found that would things so much more suspicious than just a mishap involving Duke’s lack of an epi-pen, however, he also attempted to bring this up with Blanc as ‘who tried to kill me?’ So would probably look a bit weird for him if it was determined by an Autopsy to be an allergic reaction.

  • @phantasosxgames8488

    @phantasosxgames8488

    Жыл бұрын

    but that is the point: Miles Bron quickly acted that someone poisoned his own cup , so it would only goes back into making Miles suspicious , since pineapple wouldn't affect him.

  • @Thommy2n

    @Thommy2n

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly! I thought the same thing. He’s good at quick and decisive thinking, which can be very much considered one of many types of intelligence in it’s own right. But that quick thinking he does is only seemingly in the moment one step at a time, not really considering the following steps to see if it can actually follow through & work. Be it launching Klear before proper testing, borrowing the Mona Lisa with an easy override, building a fancy dock that is useless in high tide. Or impulsively murdering his friends with the nearest thing available the second things he doesn’t have full control over them.

  • @android19willpwn

    @android19willpwn

    Жыл бұрын

    I disagree here. If he truly wasn't the culprit, he would have no idea what the cause was. In this scenario, he saw someone drink from his glass and immediately die. Assuming poison in already suspicious circumstances wouldn't be an unreasonable action. Assuming an allergy would be *more* reasonable but, with how quickly everyone else gets onboard, it's clearly not the first thing on people's minds. It's one of the better, subtler misdirects he performs.

  • @jonsrecordcollection7172

    @jonsrecordcollection7172

    Жыл бұрын

    @@phantasosxgames8488 Exactly! Miles claimed somebody tried to poison him. If that's the case, there should have been actual poison in the cup. Instead, the cup would smell like pineapple, which isn't poisonous to Miles. But pineapple was poisonous to Duke, which makes Miles Bron's claims that "Somebody's trying to poison me!" immediately suspicious. Miles' poisoning of Duke only looks likes evil genius if you don't think about it for more than 5 minutes.

  • @djwewasson

    @djwewasson

    Жыл бұрын

    Also the missing gun makes the death incredibly suspicious. Like, with nothing else it could look like Duke was killed to get access to his gun right before Helen was shot. And Duke getting killed by pineapple in Mile's cup leaves little other conclusions...

  • @kingflumph5968
    @kingflumph5968 Жыл бұрын

    There's a model sometimes used in game theory called 'level k thinking' which describes the framework of how players in a strategic game think about the actions of other players. A "level zero" player, also called a naive player, acts as if the other players don't exist, or at least without really considering how the other players will act. A level one player considers other players as if they are all level zero, and plans their strategy to respond to level zero planning from others. A level two player considers all others to be level-one players, and so on. It seems to me like miles is a level one player at most, but most likely a level zero. As Mr. Garbage points out, he rarely consider the ramifications of his actions or how other people are likely to respond to them when he makes his decisions. He either doesn't know what other people are likely to do, or he assumes it incorrectly because he assumes that he is at the highest k level. As said, he's not special. He's a naive and sometimes competent guy stumbling his way through a situation that demands a lot more strategic thinking than he is capable of, and it works for a while because he is confident enough to seem like he belongs. Great video as always!

  • @PillarofGarbage

    @PillarofGarbage

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the added nuance, very interesting!

  • @McDonaldsCalifornia

    @McDonaldsCalifornia

    Жыл бұрын

    That meshes pretty well with the fact that Blanc overestimated him. Blanc treated him as a higher level player

  • @just-trying-my-best-everyday

    @just-trying-my-best-everyday

    Жыл бұрын

    "Mr. Garbage" had me in tears

  • @DeathnoteBB

    @DeathnoteBB

    Жыл бұрын

    @@McDonaldsCalifornia Yeah poor Blanc. Too upstanding to assume sheer incompetence.

  • @VeronicaWarlock

    @VeronicaWarlock

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DeathnoteBB that’s why i think Blanc’s early framing in this movie is important. He’s being starved of challenge by Covid, forced to fall back on mass consumption puzzles and games with simple, reliable solutions. When what SEEMS to be a good Christie-level mystery comes along (with a puzzle box, a high profile corporate court case, several important figures, a murder, and a missing piece of blackmail), he is so desperate for challenge that he just assumes it will be one. He even puts Helen in danger to get himself on the scene. He skips right over Miles as a suspect because it’s “too obvious.” (I’m not criticizing him as a character, i think it’s brilliant setup for the eventual result. Fits right in with the themes. Even Blanc was taken in by the Glass Onion.)

  • @b1g_m00n
    @b1g_m00n Жыл бұрын

    as a brazilian man, recently freed from the grasp of a tyrannical nitwit, it always riles me when people say that successful men are succesful because they're some sort of genius, instead of seeing them as what they are: people who are going about the world doing what they want and getting everything they want because this world was made to give them what they want for the sole merit of being who they are. it's like saying a king is a genius because he snaps his fingers and his will gets done. his will gets done because he's the king. it's what the game is rigged towards.

  • @paulenan9636

    @paulenan9636

    Жыл бұрын

    If you don't mind me asking? How are things over there? Did the situation calm down after the coup attempt in Brazilia?

  • @b1g_m00n

    @b1g_m00n

    Жыл бұрын

    @@paulenan9636 *sigh* things are still somewhat tense. the military have always considered themselves overseers of the democracy somewhat, and that's only gotten worse since the CIA-supported military dictatorship from 64-85. Bolsonaro had been a (terrible) military man, so he ran on that to curry favor with the (many) conservative and reactionaries who hate their own freedom and would like nothing more than to have a daddy military dictator to rule over them. so his government was largely considered a military government (more military men in position of power than back in the dictatorship times, even). finally, now the military seem keen on avoiding any sort of consequence for what his government did, and also avoiding consequences for the coup (even though the rioters had spent two months in front of barracks all over Brazil demanding the army take control of the country, which is deeply unconstitutional, and even though numerous high ranking army folk tried to stop the rioters from being arrested during the putsch attempt). the main thing that worries me is that the security forces are deeply reactionary (as per). Lula is really politically savvy and he's done his best to rally numerous formerly conflicting forces to his side - really, this mealy mouthed revolt performance only galvanized and legitimized his grasp on power - and he's just fired the insubordinate head of the army, but the guy he's put in his place isn't reaaaally that much of a democrat (considering he was head of the military academy when Bolsonaro started campaigning in it back in 2014 - which goes against both military and electoral statutes - and was the boss of a specially authoritarian general that threatened the supreme court to keep Lula in jail back in 2018 so that Bolsonaro could win). really, my fear is that one of these days Lula will give an order and someone somewhere won't abide by it. that's a crisis. the only reason this hasn't happened yet is that they have much less popular support than they had in 64 - even though even back then their support wasn't that solid - and essentially none of the international support (thank the USA for electing Biden, God only know what would have happened is DJT was still in power).

  • @paulenan9636

    @paulenan9636

    Жыл бұрын

    @@b1g_m00n damn, that bad, huh? Got friends in Ceara who apparently managed to blend out the political troubles or at least stopped complaining about it, so now learning that problems are still brewing is a bit worrying... Stay safe, man

  • @AndrewFullerton
    @AndrewFullerton Жыл бұрын

    This sort of thing is why we need to teach media literacy in schools. Same as how a villain doing X evil act in a story isn't the author explicitly endorsing X, or how narrative decisions are about more than just avoiding plot holes.

  • @envysart797
    @envysart797 Жыл бұрын

    I think you can read this film as Miles having been so stupid the entire time that he doesn’t grasp who Andi is until Duke shows him the Google alert. Like this whole time, he thinks he somehow failed to kill Cassandra and she’s there to actually take part in the game.

  • @JohnRollercoasterJr

    @JohnRollercoasterJr

    Жыл бұрын

    That would be hilarious

  • @matti.8465

    @matti.8465

    Жыл бұрын

    I can see Miles thinking Andi showing up like nothing happened is her playing with him, hence why he's so nervous around her.

  • @codeimplode
    @codeimplode Жыл бұрын

    From Netflixs 'Dont Look Up' Kate: "You guys, the truth is way more depressing. They are not even smart enough to be as evil as you're giving them credit for."

  • @chud2169
    @chud2169 Жыл бұрын

    The movie is titled "Glass Onion". Thinking something is complex and layered (like an ogre) but it's made of glass making those "layers", that perceived depth, pointless.

  • @camipco
    @camipco Жыл бұрын

    Another important thing that many people missed about "Miles is dumb". It is said by Blanc, who is a genius, and he says it as a self-reprimand. In context, Blanc clearly means "Miles is dumb compared to how smart I assumed he was".

  • @furbysimitar
    @furbysimitar Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed glass onion, the style, twist, the characters *chefs kiss* Surprisingly your videos have increased my enjoyment 10 fold. There are callbacks I missed and depth that I didn’t see my first viewing. I believe this movie will become my litmus test on the quality of people’s movie critiquing.

  • @ryanangelastro504

    @ryanangelastro504

    Жыл бұрын

    I also love how this and the original Knives Out are self contained, so you don’t need to watch one, to watch the other.

  • @bpora01
    @bpora01 Жыл бұрын

    I think he knows how to talk to people. To tell them what they want to hear in a way that gets him what he wants from them. A very underappreciated power.

  • @victorcsavage

    @victorcsavage

    Жыл бұрын

    I definitely agree that Miles is at least good at BSing. The Elizabeth Holmes homages are an especially accurate analogy; she clearly wasn't an incompetent idiot, but she turned Theranos into a giant snowball she had no chance at stopping despite the fact that the whole premise of the company was BS. And yet she was able to charm enough people during and before the grift that those on the outside saw it as another precocious inventor type; such a massive success can't be all smoke and mirrors, especially when the magician is so damn convincing. The difference is that Miles was able to hype a product/company that did deliver because of Andi's competence. But I still think Alpha did go further than it could have with a master BSer up front , but he obviously couldn't hack it as the sole leader.

  • @Electronica27

    @Electronica27

    Жыл бұрын

    Unappreciated? More like sinisterly hidden. It's pretty explicit that it's implied that he represents Elon Musk in many ways. He did not found Tesla not PayPal, just happened to be in the right place and right time. And made sure he was the face of all of it. Then when it comes for him to actually manage free from proper advisors, he makes all of the wrong decisions. Some people are really good at looking like leaders rather than being an actual leader.

  • @TSDTalks22
    @TSDTalks22 Жыл бұрын

    Dread it, run from it, another video on Glass Onion from Pillar of Garbage always arrives

  • @nickcoronado898
    @nickcoronado898 Жыл бұрын

    I think the smartest thing Miles does in the movie (and I think it's actually quite clever) is after he kills Duke with the drink (with his OWN glass btw), he "suddenly notices" that it was his glass and redirects the suspicion, acting like it was an attempt on his own life. If I had just poisoned someone with my own glass and saw it on the floor with my own name on it I would think "shit I forgot it had my name on it, .now they'll know that I gave it to him" Ya gotta admit, that's pretty smart. But yeah otherwise all of his moves range between idiotic and like a normal person level of intelligence.

  • @subaveragejoe2
    @subaveragejoe2 Жыл бұрын

    The idea that someone who is wealthy could also be a fool is genuinely painful to deal with for a certain type of person.

  • @jeremyusreevu237

    @jeremyusreevu237

    Жыл бұрын

    How? There are...like...a ton of stupid wealthy people.

  • @geminia999

    @geminia999

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean, context is important. Someone who is wealthy from inheritance or a lottery, no one is going to think much of because their wealth is not tied to anything they've done. A person who created a successful business and become a billionaire off it shows acumen needed to succeed, often a form of intelligence (otherwise if anyone could do it, anyone would do it).

  • @katpiercemusic
    @katpiercemusic Жыл бұрын

    Miles is a confidence man. He’s good at convincing people of ideas. That’s it’s own kind of intelligence I suppose, but that intelligence is extremely limited. What’s more, as you said, he’s bought his own con, so he can’t see the danger around him. He thinks what he says is right simply because he said it. I can’t imagine where Rian Johnson got his inspiration for a character like that!

  • @hikupptheoverthinker
    @hikupptheoverthinker Жыл бұрын

    People seem to mixing up intelligence with charisma & cleverness. Miles has charisma, it's how he got into the gang with others to begin with. He also can be kind of clever here and there, but the way he carries himself mask the problems when people aren't watching for them. He was so consistently successful at this, that he then did indeed start to believe his own lies, he truly thought he was smart. It was interesting to see how easy it was for his character to unravel.

  • @Connor-vj7vf
    @Connor-vj7vf Жыл бұрын

    I watched the film and thought "Wow, I can't believe Rian just crapped out a script with an Elon caricature as the killer, seems so on the nose" Then I found out he wrote it in 2020. Life imitating art I guess

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    Did you know that Elon musk isn’t the first person in history to claim ownership of the things he’s purchased before?

  • @dammagrilla

    @dammagrilla

    Жыл бұрын

    Miles Bron rearranged is "Mr B is Elon" lol

  • @realMacMadame

    @realMacMadame

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-NameNameRian says Bron is based on a couple of people including Elon. I believe it. Who would base a character entirely on Musk in 2020?

  • @davidioanhedges

    @davidioanhedges

    Жыл бұрын

    There are plenty of other "genius" company owners who he could have based it on, Elon is just the current one, who has let the mask slip ..

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davidioanhedges It’s kind of like the writer director of this movie who constantly steals shit from other movies and pretends like he invented them himself.

  • @satyasyasatyasya5746
    @satyasyasatyasya5746 Жыл бұрын

    He's the classic late-stage Capitalism "ideas guy" in that he can only do something with the ideas of others, or have others do something with his own ideas. A peculiar kind of 'business alchemist.' Which wouldn't be a problem if such skills weren't married to the kind of greed and vanity Capitalism rewards.

  • @daelen.cclark

    @daelen.cclark

    Жыл бұрын

    How would that be done without capitalism? I want to know how to do it right.

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    Artists are some of the greatest offenders of this.

  • @sevencats4964

    @sevencats4964

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-NameName ??

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    @@daelen.cclark Give the people who had the idea and people who implement the idea, a share in the company. Give the communities you impact (or the whole of society) a stake too. Disseminate power rather than consolidate it.

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sevencats4964 Show me an original work of art that didn’t steal from anyone.

  • @cogsworther1639
    @cogsworther1639 Жыл бұрын

    Miles is a competent person who thinks that they're a genius. That's it, that's the whole movie, and I love it.

  • @ethanhandel1001

    @ethanhandel1001

    Жыл бұрын

    Not sure competent is the right word for someone who allows Blanc to stay on the island considering he showed up (from Miles' perspectie) with the woman that Miles thought he murdered a week earlier.

  • @cogsworther1639

    @cogsworther1639

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ethanhandel1001 I interpreted that moment as Miles being placed between a rock and a hard place. He didn't want Blanc to stay with him, but he couldn't turn away Blanc and the woman who he himself had invited without looking suspicious. Does he act suspicious in front of a detective now, or does he risk exposure later? In the end, his belief in his own "genius" won out. He thought that he could outplay Blanc, and so, in the end, they stay at the island. That's just my read on the scene, though.

  • @ethanhandel1001

    @ethanhandel1001

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cogsworther1639 Except they both played into the idea that it was just a prank pulled by one of his guests. Blanc was very apologetic and at that point Miles could have easily sent him away without seeming suspicious at all. He could have even come across as generous, offer to treat him to a weekend in Greece since they're already there, fly his partner in, all that stuff because of how wealthy he is, even offered to invite him back on some other occasion.

  • @stwbmc98
    @stwbmc98 Жыл бұрын

    Miles sending the box to Andi was arguably still stupid. Even if she didn’t have a twin sister, she was still highly likely to have family or friends that would’ve been able to find the email, know something’s up, and suspect the box is an alibi just like Helen

  • @ashadder795

    @ashadder795

    Жыл бұрын

    He could probably divert suspicion away by saying “look at the email, she didn’t send it to me, I didn’t know” as she didn’t send it to him (he doesn’t have an email after all). The delivery of the box was touched upon in this video at about 6:50

  • @edisonlima4647

    @edisonlima4647

    Жыл бұрын

    Not to mention if the cops took a little longer to find her body, they would find her body and in front of her house a box from Milles challenging whoever opened it to "solve my murder". That was one of the stupidest alibis possible. So pretty much in character for him. Lol

  • @stwbmc98

    @stwbmc98

    Жыл бұрын

    @@edisonlima4647 This comment made me realize they really did telegraph who the killer was from the very start. Blanc and Helen really did go to that island to solve Miles’ murder, as in the murder he committed

  • @karinalumen9722

    @karinalumen9722

    Жыл бұрын

    That would imply knowing someones email passwords

  • @colonelweird
    @colonelweird Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate this series on Glass Onion. It's rare for a youtube channel to keep coming back to the same topic with new insight, and I think it's usually a missed opportunity. I realize much of what you say in these videos is in response to some really bad takes on the film, but for once, the controversy hasn't fallen into the usual petty absurdities that we've seen so often in disputes over Star Wars or superheroes or "woke" anything -- no, these are new petty absurdities, and for once the disputes feel fresh. At university my best classes were the ones where the design of the class was on focused but open-ended discussion of particular texts -- for me the best one was an upper level seminar on Plato. The good thing about these discussions was that even when someone was badly wrong or completely misunderstood what they had read, it inspired great responses. We all had to dig a little deeper each time. I feel like something similar is happening with these videos. There's nothing better, in my opinion, that coming back to a worthwhile text again and again to look at it from a new angle, and that's what is happening with Glass Onion. I'm sure that a year from now I will remember more about the plot, characters, and themes of this film than any other film I've watched recently. It's too bad this doesn't happen more often. But I'm glad it's happening now.

  • @Rajeenik
    @Rajeenik Жыл бұрын

    I think Miles' reputation as a genius relies entirely on what he can do for other people. The guy is a basically a living Ponzi scheme. He gets some things done for people who then owes him favors, then he uses these favors to get things done for other people who then owes him favors, etc. Each things he does for people brings him influence, power or money (something all of the three), and erases whatever shortcoming or failure he could have faced. Like that moment at the beginning of the movie where Lionel shows every stupid idea Miles had, but dismiss them of it because out of all them, there was one that struck gold.

  • @senxauraximili7106

    @senxauraximili7106

    Жыл бұрын

    He’s also extremely opportunistic. He takes ideas the moment he gets the chance.

  • @graydanger
    @graydanger Жыл бұрын

    I didn't realize that burning the napkin was also a borrowed idea until watching this videos. That's just perfect.

  • @compacta_d
    @compacta_d Жыл бұрын

    I didn't think he knew Helen was an imposter until Duke showed him. He didn't stick around to make sure she actually died. He took off and almost pancaked Duke. But maybe he does and goes through it all again in front of the worlds most predefinite detective instead of literally doing nothing, letting everyone go home and work it out with Duke in a position of still upper hand.

  • @Hypershock93
    @Hypershock93 Жыл бұрын

    I kind of look at Miles like a kid trying to get out of trouble at school. No matter how intelligent they are, kids' instinct is often to try and weasel their way out of trouble, so they'll lie, point fingers, backpedal, anything they can do to avoid being the one in trouble. Miles isn't so much "a stupid person" as "a guy who failed upward who reacts on instinct when threatened"

  • @27950288419716
    @27950288419716 Жыл бұрын

    I also thought killing Andy at all was stupid. After drugging her he could have just grabbed the envelope, destroyed it and left her alive. What would she have done about it after waking up? Tell the police he destroyed a document whose very existence was contentious.

  • @Electronica27

    @Electronica27

    Жыл бұрын

    Lmfao even Blanc says that. Because the whole court case only happened a couple months ago so the heat was still high.

  • @27950288419716

    @27950288419716

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Electronica27 Not quite, Blanc states that him doing anything was stupid (which is true), but I meant just stealing and destroying the napkin without killing her would have been smarter than killing her on top of the rest.

  • @didiercollard
    @didiercollard Жыл бұрын

    Every tjme you cut to Helen's rampage at the end, it only gets more satisfying. 😁 And I love how it echoes Bron's self-hype moment when he talks about the Disruptors. After breaking all the stuff everyone kinda wanted to see broken, she breaks the thing no one wants her to break.

  • @beksfue5937
    @beksfue5937 Жыл бұрын

    I know a guy who graduated with honors from Stanford. He is very well read and knows basically everything there is to know about my country's history and politics, can spend hours talking about nuclear physics and complex mathematical problems, he even proved to HIMSELF that global warming was real (he used to think it was fake) through math and stuff... ... Then, at 70 years old, he let a dude he'd known for four months, who just HAPPENED to be a lawyer who knows about divorce law, to convince him that his wife of 20+ years had been cheating on him. Even though most of us kept telling him, with PROOF (that refuted his supposed proof) of the contrary (those who didn't just HAPPENED to have a beef with the wife, and kept telling contradictory shit, like naming one dude, but describing another one). Now the guy is mostly alone, and lost the house that cost him more than half his life savings after the divorce. As paradoxical as it sounds, people can be really intelligent and absolute, effing idiots at the same time.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 Жыл бұрын

    The painting of himself all jacked in the background is hilarious.

  • @amycox5733
    @amycox5733 Жыл бұрын

    Hey, fun fact: the Mona Lisa was painted on wood. The one shown burning in the movie is canvas. It’s possible that the prop maker just didn’t know, but it’s also possible it was deliberate, and it was a fake Mona Lisa in canon.

  • @charminglady2011

    @charminglady2011

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it was supposed to be fake to make a point. Just like that other painting that was upside down.

  • @taylordinney1484

    @taylordinney1484

    Жыл бұрын

    That would be nice since Helen wouldn't have committed a crime against humanity by burning the real one.

  • @user-pc3we6gf6j

    @user-pc3we6gf6j

    18 күн бұрын

    That reportedly was the original plan, which got scrapped because they decided it would have undermined the dramatic impact of its destruction.

  • @fredtheilig2710
    @fredtheilig2710 Жыл бұрын

    I think a revealing point was made when Helen says to Benoit "you must really be great at Clue, huh?" and he replies with something like "I'm very bad at dumb things". This is Benoit's blind spot. Early on he says "I don't need puzzles or games" and that he needs "a great case".

  • @dominikainslie9168
    @dominikainslie9168 Жыл бұрын

    I like your observations here. I think this characterisation just makes him more real. I also think it says a lot about people who think it's a plot hole. Good work, dude. I enjoyed this onionette!

  • @X2XImTheNewCancerX2X
    @X2XImTheNewCancerX2X Жыл бұрын

    I think another part of Bron's stupidity is just that he's incredibly shortsighted, which goes hand-in-hand with his overconfidence. Like, he wears a glove when shooting Helen, but doesn't seem to realize his prints would be all over the gun from when he stole it. He doesn't realize he would still be the first suspect in a traditional murder case. He doesn't realize pulling some 'who just tried to kill me?' thing would make him look incredibly suspicious when Duke's blood gets analyzed and it comes back free of any poisons and just shows it was an allergic reaction. He seems to realize Klear is dangerous to some extent but is pushing it for the money he can get from it initially, without thinking that just a couple Klear-related disasters will tank him. He's bought into his own hype so much that he's incapable of just looking a couple of steps ahead.

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot Жыл бұрын

    The Dunning Kruger effect.

  • @johandrytenias1725
    @johandrytenias1725 Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I don't think the point of the movie is that he's dumb, but that he's not the genius everybody is expecting him to be just because he's a succesful entrepreneur. Other than that, he's just as smart as any regular person

  • @iamcitizen38

    @iamcitizen38

    Жыл бұрын

    Except that Blanc specifically says that Miles is dumb over and over. And PoG specifically said it over and over in his previous videos. This video was actually a bit of a walk-back

  • @johandrytenias1725

    @johandrytenias1725

    Жыл бұрын

    @@iamcitizen38 yeah, but that's Blanc, the character, insulting Miles, another character, just because he makes up words and he's not that clever to get away with murder. I'm talking about the movie itself, we can put together all the pieces the movie gave us and come up with this conclusion. As for PoG using the term before, sure, this video feels like a walk-back but it is also a response to those who consider Miles making smart moves at times a sort of contradiction.

  • @iamcitizen38

    @iamcitizen38

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johandrytenias1725 I think you're right and I think PoG has it right in this newest video. But those comments were on to something because a lot of analysis of this movie buys into Blanc's assessment of Miles as a complete idiot.

  • @floppiethethirth
    @floppiethethirth Жыл бұрын

    I think the box was almost certainly sent out before the murder. Otherwise Miles needed to have ordered a box, have the box created, sent to Andi, have the box be found by Helen and the taken to Blanc. And only then can Blanc pull strings to get Andi's death kept under wraps. That timeline just doesn't make sense to me.

  • @sianmembrey374

    @sianmembrey374

    Жыл бұрын

    The boxes must have taken some time to design and make. I assumed he ordered a certain amount and they all got sent out by the supplier. Andi’s got sent out as it was never cancelled (deliberately or not)

  • @YourXavier
    @YourXavier Жыл бұрын

    I love what Edward Norton does with his eyes, whenever Miles is out of his depth.

  • @shraka
    @shraka Жыл бұрын

    He's mostly lucky. He's clearly good at marketing himself, not easily ruffled, savage, and sociopathic. He is fast though. He does dumb unethical things faster than those around him because most of them - even the awful people he hangs out with - would have at least hesitation and feel some guilt about doing the things he does.

  • @tamartin64
    @tamartin64 Жыл бұрын

    I think the reason Glass Onion got so much hate is that colleges and universities churn out Miles Brons by the hundreds of thousands every year. It's called schools of business, and it beats Bro Country as the worst thing to happen to America ever, and the people who have these degrees know that, and hate it when they're called out on it.

  • @user-pc3we6gf6j

    @user-pc3we6gf6j

    18 күн бұрын

    I suspect it has more to do with some very reactionary people still being very upset about The Last Jedi.

  • @DanAvenell
    @DanAvenell Жыл бұрын

    He's not an idiot, he's not a genius. He is very sneaky though.

  • @BlazeMakesGames
    @BlazeMakesGames Жыл бұрын

    Yeah some people seem to think that characters can only make the correct choice 100% of the time, or if they’re meant to be dumb, that means they have to be 100% dumb and any move that isn’t blatantly stupid is this “out of character” Like you said the point isn’t even really how smart the move miles makes is, it’s just that everyone else around him is assuming that he’s way smarter than he actually is, it’s all about idolization and overestimating someone just because they’re rich. The level of intelligence he has in each of his moves individually don’t matter, as long it’s lower than what everyone expected him to do.

  • @sydneylynskey7587
    @sydneylynskey7587 Жыл бұрын

    I always took the movie saying that what makes someone smart is the ability come up with original ideas. It’s like you said in this video everything that Miles did that would have been considered genius moves where taken from someone else.

  • @dreamlandnightmare
    @dreamlandnightmare Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, Miles isn't a complete knuckle-dragging neanderthal, but, in the end, he's not terribly bright either. It's almost as if his character is written to be dimensional and realistic.

  • @nelestegemerten6125
    @nelestegemerten6125 Жыл бұрын

    love that when you say "clear a few things up" it's a shot of Helen holding Klear in her hand nice detail!

  • @jonreese7066
    @jonreese7066 Жыл бұрын

    Maybe I am alone but killing Duke by Pineapple could have been passed off as an accident. He even manages to manipulate everyones memory by saying Duke might have taken his glass by accident

  • @lewsmith9708
    @lewsmith9708Ай бұрын

    I was today-years-old when I realized that Miles in the flashback was dressed exactly like Tom Cruise's character in _Magnolia._ Excellent touch! 🤣

  • @theshazerin
    @theshazerin Жыл бұрын

    3:34 I just realized there's a Kanye mural on his wall... this movie has so many details

  • @sandrafaith
    @sandrafaith Жыл бұрын

    You can be stupid and still be able to recognize when an opportunity to take advantage of a situation presents itself.... Edit: As Andi's arrival goes, it is possible that Miles thought she survived the poisoning attempt...

  • @samuelrogers1765
    @samuelrogers1765 Жыл бұрын

    I thought the movie made it pretty clear that he didn't send Andi the box intentionally. He has placed the order well ahead of their falling out, and simply forgot that he had one made for her. When he talks about the boxes he mentions that the artisan only just had enough time to make the 4 boxes, forgetting that he had in fact ordered 5.

  • @ladynoluck
    @ladynoluck Жыл бұрын

    His overconfidence is also why, even in the first act, you can actually see him do every step to kill Duke and get the gun to kill “Andi.” You actually see him on screen, after Duke just blackmailed him and in front of Duke and Birdie’s eyes, lean into Duke, grab his gun, and stash it in the back of his pants. As viewers who don’t get the best angle in Act 1, it’s understandable that we could mistake the gun grab and stash as a dude hug and just adjusting his shirt, but the reason he did it in front of Birdie and Duke AND got away with it is his overconfidence. His overconfidence made him do something impulsive, but his overconfidence also made his actions around the pickpocketing seem natural and not suspicious.

  • @Silverfang447
    @Silverfang447 Жыл бұрын

    Miles Bron is the epitome of what conservatives mindlessly follow.

  • @ethansimon2568
    @ethansimon2568 Жыл бұрын

    I feel as though the pineapple juice murder was also extremely stupid because if Duke had an Epipen or some sort of medication, something most people with dangerous allergies have, he would have survived and Miles would have been screwed. I mean it worked out for him, but mainly because of his luck.

  • @onezerotwo
    @onezerotwo Жыл бұрын

    100% hoped this video to just be the word "Yes" and then 9 minutes of spoiler padding. XD

  • @Drudenfusz
    @Drudenfusz Жыл бұрын

    The interesting things is that personally I think that being capable to build on the ideas of others is actually rather intelligent. That is why the idiom about standing on the shoulders of giants always rang tue for me. Of course just plagiarising an idea is not enough, people have to be transformative about it, to expand the older idea and that is where Miles fails in the film.

  • @kathrynvincent1563
    @kathrynvincent1563 Жыл бұрын

    Miles reminds me of Winston Deaver from Incredibles 2. He isn’t the ideas guy, his sister Evelyn was. The inventions and ideas were Evelyn’s genius but needed someone to sell them so they’d receive support. But Winston knew he wasn’t the inventor. If he thought he was both roles, he’d be Miles Bron

  • @normtrooper4392
    @normtrooper4392 Жыл бұрын

    In knives out, harlan was quite smart (successful mystery writer) but a terrible father (bad social skills). In glass onion, Miles is an idiot but very good at social skills. In the third movie, will the villain be both of these traits or none of them?

  • @samfisher6606
    @samfisher6606 Жыл бұрын

    That was my take. He wasn't a total idiot. It takes some brilliance to think on the fly the way he did, even it he did it by stealing ideas. There's something to be said for his ability to enact a plan or get something accomplished. Getting all of his friends their opportunities takes some semblance of brains. Being "not as smart as people think you are" doesn't mean you're an idiot. He's not Ed, Edd, and Eddy stupid.

  • @geminia999

    @geminia999

    Жыл бұрын

    Yet that is what the movie presents him as. "He's dumb", Blanc can't solve simple things and thus misses parts because of it. The movie presents him as being dumb and that being the twist. The twist isn't, He's just kind of average, it's that he's stupid, which does not align with what he is actually shown as accomplishing

  • @Crushanator1

    @Crushanator1

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the counter example to this is Blanc getting called a dumbass by all his friends online, VS Bron getting told he's a genius by both the world and his friends. Even if they're both perfectly average intelligence, the idea that Blanc is humbled often enough that he strives to be contemplative and work things out speaks volumes vs Brown's nearly nonstop declarations of his own greatness and instant ideas he's stolen and then already decided are optimal. There are ways he could have murdered Andi, Duke or Helen more successfully, even in his limited window to kill Helen. If he had worked out the situation even briefly he would have. Like, Blanc prompts him with the "turn off the lights with a loaded gun" comment and as far as I could tell, Bron spends the next five seconds remembering he had already set the lights to turn off, then spends the next several hours basically on vacation. Even if he didn't have the lights planned, that's like, one minute of work? He had literally no plan for how to kill her *and get away with it* until he learned he needed to kill Duke. He's not the dumbest person on the planet, but he doesn't have to be. He's just kinda dumb because he's well educated (maybe?) but doesn't think about the consequences of his actions in any way other than the praise he'll receive. Vs the genius persona, it doesn't feel out of place for Blanc to be shook that "he's just dumb!"

  • @theoneyednightwing8558
    @theoneyednightwing8558 Жыл бұрын

    You mention this briefly but correct me if I’m wrong he helps out all of the other friends right? That implied a level of business acumen to me that showed at quite a bit of intelligence to be able to navigate so many fields. I really think that this movie could have benefitted by having it shown at one point he’s from money and simply put up the funds to get these others started and that would allow for a better commentary on real life “self made” billionaires that they often already quite well off to begin with and become richer simply because they have more money to play around with. It would also add even more irony to the disrupter theory. It just comes across as a slight inconsistency and a missed opportunity given how it’s just brushed aside that he can just kickstart all of these non related careers but maybe I’m nitpicking.

  • @Jan-gh7qi

    @Jan-gh7qi

    Жыл бұрын

    My interpretation was, that he used His giant confidence, to set them up. He just went to the political Party/the streaming network/the fashion brand and proclaimed with the most certainty "I found him. I have the next big Player in the game, thank ne later" He IS very good at selling shit and in the case of his friends, noone of them was really terrible at their Job. So them beeing able to show mediocre skill, hyped up by his constant praise/gaslighting might have done the trick.

  • @theoneyednightwing8558

    @theoneyednightwing8558

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Jan-gh7qi Thats a fair reading. I think I would have just preferred it if that was shown by the movie. I don't think the hugs exchanged between him and the friends scenes are as impactful as showing us how he gets all of the friends their positions of power. And maybe that would have given the game away too early but I think you could work in a small clip of the process at that point and then flashback to it when blanc is tearing him apart to emphasise this guy just got this way through overconfidence or money or some other method that wasn't intelligence.

  • @jasminetea8232
    @jasminetea8232 Жыл бұрын

    Basically, Andy is a type of person to write the script, but miles will be the producer making things work

  • @user-pc3we6gf6j
    @user-pc3we6gf6jАй бұрын

    To quote Burn After Reading: "Intelligence is relative".

  • @wowlsj
    @wowlsj Жыл бұрын

    One other "Mile's dumb" point I've not seen (perhaps I missed earlier commenters) is that Miles gave Blanc the Klear, but he NEVER ASKED FOR IT BACK! So what he hands out Klear like party favor or what. Blanc wisely held on to it, much to Helen's benefit.

  • @RitaSuszekTV
    @RitaSuszekTV Жыл бұрын

    I really felt the "rules are for other people" energy in Miles. He's the kind of guy who "questions" established scientific principles or common sense ideas (like protecting a valuable painting, or, you know, health and safety of a manned space flight), because he feels he's too big to fail and his quirky ways and "well, maybe gravity doesn't work, huh? huh?!" mark him in his own mind as a genius. Questioning is important in science, but I feel like there are people who have heard that and decided to "question" everything without having a reason to do it. (see also: vaccine discussions).

  • @nobody4248
    @nobody4248 Жыл бұрын

    Honestly, the docoy invitation might be a bad idea. If someone is murdered and you are famously at bad terms with them and they receive an invitation to your private island right aftewards, that seems kinda suspicious.

  • @kavyntar2194
    @kavyntar2194 Жыл бұрын

    i find it fascinating how miles “poisons” duke with the pineapple, saying that someone tried to kill him. once the police investigated it an autopsy would have found traces of pineapple, so the poison idea would make miles pretty suspicious. everything would be traced to him

  • @brokencandy1797
    @brokencandy1797 Жыл бұрын

    I don't think he's entirely stupid, I think he's been elevated to a level that is beyond his depth and is unaware of his limitations, thus not taking care to work within and around him. He could be very successful working within his element and seem very intelligent, and may even be up to a point- but he's hit a wall in terms of his ability.

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    Did we watch the same movie? He's thick as a brick on most levels and demonstrates only mid level competence a few times. What he is is extremely confidant, instinctively two faced, vicious, and extremely lucky.

  • @user-NameName

    @user-NameName

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shraka You did a great job of explaining why he shouldn’t have made any smart decisions in the movie.

  • @brokencandy1797

    @brokencandy1797

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shraka Andi's very intelligent. He must have been highly confident in his initial capacity for her to have chosen him as her business partner. It's one thing to surround oneself with tools like Duke and Birdie socially so you can always be the smartest person in a room, another thing to stake your finances and reputation on empty charm.

  • @shraka

    @shraka

    Жыл бұрын

    @@brokencandy1797 ... You're confusing intelligence with confidence and charisma.

  • @brokencandy1797

    @brokencandy1797

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shraka I'm not. The character had areas of competence but was now working outside of them in such a way that his shortcomings were more apparent then they would have been in his previous role. Furthermore, social-emotional intelligence IS a form of intelligence. There are different types and they aren't necessarily consistent across the board. Think of somebody like say for instance Ben Carson. He's a brain surgeon so obviously he's not stupid, but place him in the political realm and let him talk about general things and he sounds like a complete tool. Because he's out of his depth in that respect- but you'd get a different story looking at his MCATs.

  • @Renigade68
    @Renigade68 Жыл бұрын

    Another great point about how dumb Miles is is that to him, this entire island party really was just a fun getaway, he had zero machinations going into it, Miles didn't go in with the intention of killing Duke, he did it spontaneously when Duke started blackmailing him, because he clearly didn't understand in advance that Duke knowing what he did would end up being a problem for him, and there's something similar with Lionel, he faxed Miles about the envelope and Miles hadn't considered that it might look suspicious to Lionel when shortly afterwards Andi wound up dead, he wasn't planning to do anything about any of those loose ends at this party, he has no forethought, same thing with the whole klear business in general, there's also not burning the envelope, letting a famous detective like Blank have free reign of his island, installing an override switch for the Monalisa, and even confessing to its existence in front of Andi who from his perspective he already tried to kill and she maybe knows it? More than anything his inability to think ahead seems to be his defining dumb character trait.

  • @Sootielove
    @Sootielove Жыл бұрын

    Miles' stupidity also comes from a lack of foresight: Klear's failure would destroy his company's reputation, the police would test for fingerprints on Duke's gun, they'd test Duke's glass for poison and reveal it's just pineapple juice, he didn't burn the letter until someone told him he should have, he didn't think his friends would check their phones about Andi's suicide, etc. He just assumes that he can coast through these serious crimes the same way he coasted through Andi's business despite the fields being so different.

  • @stephenweir9768
    @stephenweir9768 Жыл бұрын

    Everything about Glass Onion makes perfect sense. You can not like the movie, but it's not as flawed as it's portrayed by a certain group of people who... also have opinions on new Star Wars projects.

  • @johnnyrivas2619
    @johnnyrivas2619 Жыл бұрын

    I'm going to take a moment to inbreathiate this video.

  • @MGEX8206
    @MGEX8206 Жыл бұрын

    Having just seen Glass Onion last night, I wouldn't call Miles "stupid", rather I'd call him "cocky". I've known enough people with raw intelligence who thought they were bulletproof and it turned out...not so much.

  • @NothingIsKnown00
    @NothingIsKnown00 Жыл бұрын

    If you’re ruthless enough you generally have a leg up on most normal people. They expect you to have empathy like they do so you can stay one step ahead.

  • @DisKorruptd
    @DisKorruptdАй бұрын

    Every single "Smart" thing Miles does in the film is prompted by someone else. Blanc says it himself: "Your one murder with any panache at all, and you stole the whole idea from me! " "you still kept the envelope? You didn't burn it or anything?" Even Miles admits to it! "No, my puzzle guy barely got the five done in time," "It’s fine. It doesn’t matter. It’s just… I hired Gillian Flynn to write the whole thing…" Even his puzzle boxes and murder mystery aren't his own idea

  • @GrandArchPriestOfTheAlgorithm
    @GrandArchPriestOfTheAlgorithm Жыл бұрын

    The Recommending Ones & Zeros apologizes for the devastating and overwhelming distress that must have happened while waiting on our blessing.

  • @PillarofGarbage

    @PillarofGarbage

    Жыл бұрын

    thank goodness the ones and zeroes are here 🤩

  • @tyrrhus5248
    @tyrrhus5248 Жыл бұрын

    Andy making the mistake to come see miles is really important in my opinion because she also needs to show to have flaws: the message of the work would have been lost a bit she were all perfect

  • @Jan-gh7qi

    @Jan-gh7qi

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it's perfectly in character. Yes, she was clever, but she was also very arrogant. "For future biographers". I think a) she always saw him as second to her and to big of a whimp to really harm her. (Arrogance) But also believed him to be smarter. "He wouldn't kill me, He must know, that he will never get away with it". Which was right, Hehe just was to stupid to know.

  • @Batman1016
    @Batman1016 Жыл бұрын

    When people find themselves incredulous about the stupid behavior of supposedly brilliant people (clearest modern predominant examples are Musk and Putin, but there have been countless others throughout the years), and decide to lean into conspiracy theories (we just don't understand his methods, he's building something better, 4D chess, etc) rather than accept the reality, the comparison I am always drawn to is Richard Nixon. In his position at the time, he was arguably the most powerful man in the world (arguable 'cuz Russia was still a superpower), and he knew it. But rather than playing things smart and safe, and acting with the decorum his office demanded, he was renowned for saying all the unhinged, racist, vindictive, conspiratorial BS that came to mind. He would go on rants to his staff and advisors. And he planned his crimes right there in the Oval Office. On tape. Recorded for posterity for everyone to hear. Which he KNEW, but ignored. Because he thought he was untouchable. People who criticize Glass Onion - and, in real life, ultra-hardcore stan people like Musk - seem to think that stupidity is just a universal built-in function. It's CONDITIONAL. It's about comfort. It's about lack of restraint. It's about having the freedom to make mistakes and people let you. Plenty of smart people did dumb things because a situation caused them to think with their ego (or other parts, let's not pretend just about EVERYONE hasn't acted like an idiot over someone attractive, for example) rather than their brains. Tesla was a scientific genius, but was completely inept when it came to money and patents. Einstein left his wife for his cousin. Thomas Midgley Jr was a chemist who revolutionized transportation and refrigeration . . . by inventing both leaded gasoline and chlorofluorocarbons, and just ignoring the potential threat of both, to the point that he would inhale them on-stage in front of press to prove they were safe. Genius doesn't erase stupidity. Stupidity is largely based on hindsight, and it is UNIVERSAL in humanity. And it is enhanced by hubris. Which successful "geniuses" have in spades.

  • @sd659
    @sd659 Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn't say MIles is dumb or a genius, obviously, I just consider him unimaginative. He doesn't have ideas just knows how to capitalize on other peoples ideas and does that well. For everything else he seems normal, arrogant, but also confident which worked out great for him until the moment he faces "the worlds greatest detective"

  • @vit.budina
    @vit.budina2 ай бұрын

    I feel like nobody is stupid as long as they know their limits. A uni graduate who overestimates themselves can come off more stupid than someone who is objectively less intelligent, but who knows where their limits are.

  • @samuelfischman6949
    @samuelfischman6949Ай бұрын

    The fact that you missed this opportunity to have the thumbnail asking "IS HE STUPID?" is an absolute travesty.

  • @TheforeverPigeonKing
    @TheforeverPigeonKing27 күн бұрын

    I don’t think miles thought he killed andi and knew she was resurrected or that she wasn’t real. But that he thought he didn’t kill her. The more likely scenario is that he just thought that the drugs didn’t work and he is less shocked and more disappointed. That’s mainly why he try’s and kill her later, because he doesn’t know that this isn’t andi, so he try’s again to kill her.

  • @MCAPrince
    @MCAPrince Жыл бұрын

    The Mona Lisa was the perfect painting to use in the movie too. It is not one of the best paintings of all time, people just think it is because it got famous after it was stolen once. It's not that special, there are literally better paintings in the same room as the Mona Lisa, but the line of people there is literally only paying attention to the Mona Lisa itself. It is overrated/overestimated.

  • @syedmuhammadtaqipervaiz7846
    @syedmuhammadtaqipervaiz78467 ай бұрын

    I agree with this explanation. This is one of my all-time favourite movies, and it pained me to see people argue how Miles was suddenly portrayed as an idiot after proving to be a genius before that. It's clear from what Blanc said that everyone, including Miles, over estimates him. His Dock doesn't float, his fuel is explosive, his plans are childish, and he makes up words. He is just a confident idiot who makes others take fall for his mistakes

Келесі