Benji believes it would be a fantastic idea to pose for pictures with Warsaw Uprising on Afdah. David hesitates because he thinks it's rude. However, Benji's charisma wins over everyone, and David finds himself forced to take pictures with five different cameras. However, later in the journey, Benji gets really worked up about being in first class on a train headed to a concentration camp and has a "huge emotional 'look at me!'" moment about it. He then goes on to criticize Sharpe's James for being "academic" and "too touristy" with his readings. Here, Eisenberg and Culkin achieve a superb balance. Late in the trip, Culkin embarrasses himself again at a dinner, and Eisenberg lets loose a torrent of tears in the bathroom.
"I want to kill him, I want to be him, I hate and love him." It's some of Eisenberg's most exquisite and fragile pieces from his career. Reminiscing with Culkin from another rooftop finds them both at the pinnacle of their professions. The grim tour to the camp is executed to the hilt. Amazing work. Vivian, Chris's sister, will shortly be leaving for college. As siblings do, Chris and Vivian fight and even go so far as to piss in her lotion bottle. However, over time, Vivian comes to value the limited time she has left with her brother. Even if he is emotionally immature and unworthy of comfort, his loneliness will increase significantly after she departs. each and every defense.
Every defensive voice crack is a plea for assistance from a very confused 13-year-old who still wants to convince his older skateboarding pals that he is just half Asian, despite growing up in a mixed environment. Wang makes a significant decision by highlighting the naive biases that still exist among Chris's peers. His crush, Madi, informs him that "he's pretty cute... for an Asian" as she presses in for a kiss. Though his tiny wince implies that something in his gut may be telling him otherwise, he takes this as a complement. Additionally, his friends flatter him by claiming that Madi "has yellow fever" before their date. Chris doesn't seem to be able to make sense of the aspects of his identity that are associated with his race in relation to the characteristics he recognizes as distinctive.
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