Downsizing.2017.720p.bluray.hin-eng.x264.esub-k... -
For the uninitiated: Paul Safranek (Matt Damon) and his wife Audrey (Kristen Wiig) are an ordinary Omaha couple drowning in debt. Then they hear about a radical new procedure – scientists have figured out how to shrink humans to 5 inches tall. Why? Because a tiny person consumes almost nothing. A $50,000 retirement fund becomes a fortune in a miniature community. You can live like a king in a gated "Leisureland" condo, surrounded by lavish dollhouse mansions and cheap luxuries.
And you know what? I think people were too hard on it.
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Here’s the post: Downsizing (2017) – A Flawed, Fascinating Mess That Tried to Do Too Much (And I Kinda Loved It)
Then comes the film’s most divisive element: Ngoc Lan Tran (Hong Chau), a Vietnamese political activist who was shrunk against her will and now works as a maid, missing a leg. Her performance is raw, furious, and uncomfortably funny. She steals every single scene. She also delivers the film’s brutal thesis – that even in a "perfect" miniature society, the rich still exploit the poor, and Western liberals (like Damon’s character) are all talk, no action. For the uninitiated: Paul Safranek (Matt Damon) and
But in an era of safe, formulaic studio films, I respect a movie that swings for the fences and breaks its bat.
720p BluRay | Dual Audio (HIN-ENG) | x264 | ESubs Included Because a tiny person consumes almost nothing
7/10. Watch it for Hong Chau. Stay for the weird Norwegian ant people.
I finally sat down and rewatched Downsizing – the Alexander Payne sci-fi satire that promised a quirky, high-concept comedy about shrinking yourself to live in a miniature utopia, but instead delivered a meandering, existential, and deeply weird meditation on class, privilege, environmental collapse, and the meaning of a life well-lived.
I won’t spoil the final hour, but let’s just say Downsizing abandons satire for something closer to spiritual science fiction. There’s a doomsday plot involving a hidden bunker, a cult of Norwegian idealists, and a speech about ants that somehow becomes the emotional core of the movie. It’s messy. It’s ambitious. It doesn’t fully land.
Downsizing is not a perfect movie. It’s a beautiful failure – a film with three different third acts, a protagonist who is intentionally passive and frustrating, and a political message that swings from sharp to clumsy. But it’s also one of the most original studio films of the last decade. It asks: If you could shrink your problems away, would you? Or would you just find new, smaller ones?