I think you guys have gotten it wrong. I don’t think they buried him. He said he’d help her call them. Then they filled the hole back in. At the end he doesn’t take the full amount because all he did effectively was call an ambulance. I think the ‘smirk’ was both a smile of relief and a smirk, but one of irony, because in the end she didn’t bury him in the house. She was able to let go and have him buried properly
Exactly - how did this go over everyone's head?..... maybe because it starts with calling a man a woman, with gender dysphoria laying a foundation that the worst case scenario being the accepted. If that man is a woman, then of course it was a murder and the paid escort is going to do whatever for the money (again, another misconception that is accepted as the norm).
That's definitely the way I saw it too. He helped her realise what had to be done and helped her do it. At the end, they are waiting for the emergency services to show up.
I am familiar with the Juliet's work, she is an absolute treasure, but this is my first time seeing Anthony and he is RIVETING. I hope to see him in many more works in the future.
Beautiful story. Yes, I hope, in the end, he helped her bury him. I, too, would prefer to just be buried in my garden- no fuss, no muss! I’ve mentioned it to my adult children- Sadly, I don’t own my own property) - but read this: ‘Is it legal for me to bury a family member on the property? use, if any; and have their written consent; • You agree to maintain accurate, permanent records of the burial, and; You agree to disclose the burial upon sale of the property.’ FYI
Almost touching, great writing and acting for sure, a lot of emotions out of an odd situation, and yet relatable in the sense that any of us could walk in and find someone we love dead at random at any moment and really never know how we would react to such a deep loss until it happens, so who are we to judge? I think that’s what appears to have been the thought process of the young man as he at first makes a run for it and then comes back to help. Good film 👍
Very well made; perfect casting, acting, directing, cinematography - yeah, everything in fact. 👏🏻As fir the story, liked the guy's honesty in only taking a few bills as after all he just filled in the hole she'd earlier dug out. 👍🏻
The only problem I have with this is how does anyone know he wasn't murdered and needed someone to help her hide the body. Without a signed and stamped seal of approval documenting his wishes, I'm not buying it and, in turn, have me become an accomplice to a homicide. All the same, I would have still kept the 5k for my trouble.
@@tyriciankelly9185 I just re-watched that part.....could have been a smirk,but I saw it as more like relief and thankfulness.....I just posted "how does he know that she didn't kill him" above,so it COULD be a smirk.....but I don't really think so
Wow. Powerful. Human. Dying wishes are sometimes not easy to honor. This one is very relatable. Grief. It is one of the toughest things to go through, no matter how many times you've experienced it. Whom she chose to call and the man that responded is where a true heart shone through in this film. I was in tears when she put her head upon his shoulder. Excellent film. Raw. Honest. Delving into the grey where right and wrong blur and sometimes situations just don't fit under either category. BRAVO!
@@Killtoi how could I not? To me it was THE most accurate portrayal of the intricate and complex fundamentally flawed nature of being human. It is a masterpiece.
I'd like a sea burial £100 coffin drilled with holes lined with lead, £50 license, death certificate hire of the boat, maybe a reception at a coastal pub, job done. I think traditional burials are such a r.i.p off. Thought provoking drama quality acting.
People have extreme reactions to death and loss. You never know how you or anyone else will react. Part of the feeling she had was she didn't want him to be dead, The idea of "keeping him" near her was a big part of why she had him in the bathtub on ice for three days. As long as she had this crazy plan she felt in control of her feelings. She didn't want to let go and to grieve.
@Jamie Joy Absolutely. It's all part of the human condition. We all come to experience these themes, in our own way, sooner, or later. For me, I am going through grief, again, right now. Juliet Stevenson is always superb at expressing these emotional complexities; subtleties, and rawness, without hamming it up. I appreciated reading your comment, because it's rare that someone understands grief so well, and can articulate it so well - especially in a UA-cam comment section!
Maybe I am just not convinced about the details, but did she dig that hole in the garden, and together, in broad daylight, they buried an accidental corpse? - with no nosy neighbour, in the middle of a city, not getting to see it?
Well, they didn’t bury the corpse…they refilled hole. They ended up calling the ambulance to pick up the body in the end, which is why you hear the siren approaching.
She could have saved herself a whole lot of grief and 3 days of shoveling by just having her beloved cremated, and bury his urn or scatter his ashes in the garden, thereby fulfilling his wishes.
11:03 if you turn the english auto generated captions on, it's interesting how it says "thank you" out of the environment (sometimes it says "foreign" or "applause" by mistake), but it fits the scene so well
The trust is gone after someone locks me in the bathroom with a dead person. I'd absolutely not be going back to help someone who imprisoned me. There are other ways to have that conversation.
Yes, right. Glad that he eventually agreed to listen and she got the chance to give explanation and an offer of 500 which is also an offer of giving him the option to pick his own choice. A trust is established when he asked her to open the door while promised won't go anywhere and she believed him so unlocked him from the bathroom. The film is short that the part he puts sense into her head was leftout that it's not right to bury it there and she finally agreed not to. The ongoing in the last part works like a silent movie viewers fill in own interpretation. Effective short film.
It actually makes me question just why we HAVE to bury our loved ones in a cemetery!!! We are so controlled if you think about it! A WISE MAN QUESTIONS EVERYTHING!
Because in 20 years when someone else buys the house, they don't want a random body in the back garden. Nor would the family want to have to visit their old house every time they want to visit their dead father/grandfather's grave.
Health and safety, also. A person needs to be buried 6 feet under, due to the smell, and any communicable disease. At that depth, a water pipe may be hit, or any underground power lines, or something foundational to any surrounding buildings, or walls, maybe.
@@jennifergannuscio6086 I fully support thinking! That's why I responded to your question. Too many people on UA-cam want to shut people down who think. I am here for it!
@@martinpetersen6266 😆 You wouldnt believe the wonderful people & strange things Ive encountered on my travels ... fact truly can be stranger than fiction.
Just to clear up my comment refers to the young mans decency & how his not taking advantage of her in her grief stricken madness will have bonded & made them friends for life. I have not buried bodies for anyone in my travels .. 😊
i know its just a movie, but she would get in trouble and they will obviously find the body anyways in the backyard when people start wondering where he went.
@@albertoalmeida3424 he doesn't accept the money because he is a genuinely lovely guy who realised that she only needed help "letting go". After the initial shock at the weird situation he thinks a little and decides to offer compassionate assistance. He returns and tells her he will help her to call the authorities. They then go together to the garden and he helps her to fill in the hole. At the end they are waiting for whoever they called to show up...
Oh, heartbreaking. And yes, chroniclemedia. He helped her, somehow, realize that she couldn't grant Philip his dearest wish - the world just doesn't work that way now. That's exactly what it meant when he said he'd make the call for her. And then he helped her undo what she had done for Philip, in the garden. And waited with her, was waiting with her, for the ambulance, at the end. And wouldn't take anything more than seemed right to him, of what she'd planned to give him for his help. So poignant. And the casting is perfect. An understated tour de force.
You can't bury people or animals in your backyard because it can contaminate the water underneath it. Cemeteries are only allowed in some proper lands with the correct management of water flows.
Perfect casting, superb acting, and great cinematography. The premise was strange…and gave a surprisingly a good memorable jolt. However, the big question in my mind: Why could she not think to have him cremated, and then bury the ashes in the garden?😂
Reminds me of a short film I saw many years ago. Cop moves into an apartment building with his little boy. Little boy goes missing. He asks a neighbor if he's seen him and finds out the neighbor has been tending to his dead wife's body in their apartment for some time with the belief she'll come back to life if he can maintain her body for x amount of time. The cop ends up the neighbor's prisoner. The neighbor tries to convince him his wife will resurrect. The cop tries to convince the neighbor she won't and to let him go. I want to say it was called "Going Home". Now I remember it was one of three films in "Three Extremes 2".
Glad that he eventually agreed to listen and she got the chance to give explanation and an offer of 500 which is also an offer of giving him the option to pick his own choice. A trust is established when he asked her to open the door while promised won't go anywhere and she believed him so unlocked him from the bathroom. The film is short that the part he puts sense into her head was leftout that it's not right to bury it there and she finally agreed not to. The ongoing in the last part works like a silent movie viewers fill in own interpretation. Effective short film.
Juliet Stevenson is a superb actress and it's so awesome that u have her starring in one of ur very fine films.....but please stop calling her "old" because she's not and it's not very nice! Come on guys!
I can see this having an horror twist. She locks the Escort into the bathroom so the deceased ( which would really be some sort of human flesh eating monster or a vampire ) eats and chews him up alive. Viewers could hear the bones crushing and the horrified screams as the escort pleads in anguish.
this shows the absurdity of our current culture. When we know what is right and what is wrong, we should not entertain the wrong just so someone can feel good, because when we do that it shifts our perception of reality. Delusions of grandeur should not be entertained, especially not when it affects and hurts everyone.
Edward Abbey (an amerikan writer from the southwest), was dying of stomach cancer. He asked his closest friends to bury his body in a place that was special to him in the desert he so loved, where no one would find him. They honored his request. Graham Parsons (amerikan singer/songwriter) requested the same thing. An episode of 6' Under also had a scene with a secret burial. It's not that unusual. I'm sure it happens more than we're aware of: secret burials.
in my country (US) and state of Oregon we are able to bury family on our own property. Of course we need to inform the authorities and they make sure the person died of natural causes or that it wasn't foul play....but then we can bury family. I suppose if it was foul play you could still bury the person on your own property as long as the person doing the buring didn't do the killing. Morbid but there you have it.
Such a schocking, yet not unbelievable situation. Whatever happened, the ending was very touching. The actress seemed familiar from other films. Anyone know who she is?
Poignantly beautiful. The initial horrifying thoughts she might have drugged his drink, classic la la la as in most thrillers 🤨 Love the element of surprise Omeleto's vids usually carry. Bravi!!!!
This just makes me sad for Europeans. Currently, I live in a very rural part of the u.s., where you can bury whoever you want on your property, but after many years of living in different European countries, I realized this was a special thing. I spent years in Germany before finding out it was illegal to bury your dead pet in your own backyard. There is such a thing as property rights, and people should have the right to be buried (for free) on their own property.
I don't think they buried her husband, either, as some others have already said. Their clothing was far too clean when they were filling the hole in the garden. And there was a sort of playful attitude between them. I wouldn't be that calm after burying someone.
I think her additional reason is to keep getting her husband's regular payments as long as possible, eg his salary or pension or whatsover. May be she is afraid of loosing her house. To avoid any blackmail she could bring the body down by separate parts
I think you guys have gotten it wrong. I don’t think they buried him. He said he’d help her call them. Then they filled the hole back in. At the end he doesn’t take the full amount because all he did effectively was call an ambulance. I think the ‘smirk’ was both a smile of relief and a smirk, but one of irony, because in the end she didn’t bury him in the house. She was able to let go and have him buried properly
Exactly - how did this go over everyone's head?..... maybe because it starts with calling a man a woman, with gender dysphoria laying a foundation that the worst case scenario being the accepted. If that man is a woman, then of course it was a murder and the paid escort is going to do whatever for the money (again, another misconception that is accepted as the norm).
Ahhh yes!
@Maria CANCER shame on you for faking something so terrible
That's definitely the way I saw it too. He helped her realise what had to be done and helped her do it. At the end, they are waiting for the emergency services to show up.
Oh clever you thanks
i think he became the real friend that she needed at that moment...
I have a fantasy that he calls her at some point to see how she is getting along
What a treat, my all time favourite actor, Juliet Stevenson, in top and extremely moving form. The best 12 minutes of drama I’ve seen in a long time.
How incredibly strange and yet so amazingly relatable. So well well made and the acting was perfect.
Juliet Stevenson! Luminous enchanting and iconic. Bravo!
I was NOT expecting that. Well done.
That was so well done. It was disturbing yet beautiful in it’s own twisted way. I’m still shocked by it and that’s good.
I am familiar with the Juliet's work, she is an absolute treasure, but this is my first time seeing Anthony and he is RIVETING. I hope to see him in many more works in the future.
Watch Hanna, dude is menacing but relatable
I like how you guys call unknown actors by their first names as if you were intimate friends and we all know you’re not
@@augustinf
There's nothing "unknown" about Juliet Stevenson; you should check out her IMDB credits.
the head resting on the shoulder at the end did it for me
Funny scenario for the next owners of the house in the future..."What about a pool for the kids here, honey???"
they didn't bury him. they filled in the hole.
A friendship forged from tragedy that's what am getting from this I loved it...
Friends yeah, but let's keep in mind she's old enough to be his mother.
@@worrywart1311 Always one eh 😂🤣😂🤣... Not that kind of friendship ....
I thought she would lock him in and call the police and tell them he murdered her husband. Brilliant movie idea ! I was not expecting that
I thought so, too, until I saw the lock on the window. No murderer locks themselves in.
So sweet. I hope they have a continuing relationship.
She’s an incredible actress
I agree! I was so excited to see a film Juliet Stevenson in it again. I am never disappointed.
But she's a man ..no?
@@ldavanzo44 she’s a woman
@@daniellamcgee4251 I loved her and Alan Rickman in Truly, Madly, Deeply.
She was brilliant in ‘Bend it like Beckham’.
Beautiful story. Yes, I hope, in the end, he helped her bury him. I, too, would prefer to just be buried in my garden- no fuss, no muss! I’ve mentioned it to my adult children- Sadly, I don’t own my own property) - but read this:
‘Is it legal for me to bury a family member on the property? use, if any; and have their written consent; • You agree to maintain accurate, permanent records of the burial, and; You agree to disclose the burial upon sale of the property.’ FYI
Almost touching, great writing and acting for sure, a lot of emotions out of an odd situation, and yet relatable in the sense that any of us could walk in and find someone we love dead at random at any moment and really never know how we would react to such a deep loss until it happens, so who are we to judge? I think that’s what appears to have been the thought process of the young man as he at first makes a run for it and then comes back to help. Good film 👍
I think so too. As he says "Everyone has their own reason for calling..."
Very well made; perfect casting, acting, directing, cinematography - yeah, everything in fact. 👏🏻As fir the story, liked the guy's honesty in only taking a few bills as after all he just filled in the hole she'd earlier dug out. 👍🏻
The only problem I have with this is how does anyone know he wasn't murdered and needed someone to help her hide the body. Without a signed and stamped seal of approval documenting his wishes, I'm not buying it and, in turn, have me become an accomplice to a homicide. All the same, I would have still kept the 5k for my trouble.
RIGHT! AND....WHAT THE HELL WAS UP WITH THE SMIRK AT THE END??!!
@@tyriciankelly9185 I just re-watched that part.....could have been a smirk,but I saw it as more like relief and thankfulness.....I just posted "how does he know that she didn't kill him" above,so it COULD be a smirk.....but I don't really think so
@@mattbrash she did actually try to call the ambulance. when he reentered. unlikely if it was murder.
Well, she did try to call emergency services.
In general sure but this wasn't murder
Wow. Powerful. Human.
Dying wishes are sometimes not easy to honor. This one is very relatable.
Grief. It is one of the toughest things to go through, no matter how many times you've experienced it.
Whom she chose to call and the man that responded is where a true heart shone through in this film.
I was in tears when she put her head upon his shoulder.
Excellent film. Raw. Honest. Delving into the grey where right and wrong blur and sometimes situations just don't fit under either category.
BRAVO!
i love how much u loved it haha
@@Killtoi how could I not? To me it was THE most accurate portrayal of the intricate and complex fundamentally flawed nature of being human. It is a masterpiece.
Great acting… the ending surprised me. Thank you!
I'd like a sea burial £100 coffin drilled with holes lined with lead, £50 license, death certificate hire of the boat, maybe a reception at a coastal pub, job done. I think traditional burials are such a r.i.p off. Thought provoking drama quality acting.
I hate to think that there are those who struggle with this kind of decision. You can't bury someone in a backyard just because they ask you to do it.
People have extreme reactions to death and loss. You never know how you or anyone else will react. Part of the feeling she had was she didn't want him to be dead, The idea of "keeping him" near her was a big part of why she had him in the bathtub on ice for three days. As long as she had this crazy plan she felt in control of her feelings. She didn't want to let go and to grieve.
@@therealJamieJoy Exactly! You explained the situation very well.
@@daniellamcgee4251 thank you for thinking so. This piece overflows with the human condition of having to deal with love and loss.
@Jamie Joy Absolutely. It's all part of the human condition. We all come to experience these themes, in our own way, sooner, or later. For me, I am going through grief, again, right now.
Juliet Stevenson is always superb at expressing these emotional complexities; subtleties, and rawness, without hamming it up.
I appreciated reading your comment, because it's rare that someone understands grief so well, and can articulate it so well - especially in a UA-cam comment section!
@@therealJamieJoy Was it 3 days???? omg that's even worse.
So incredibly sad and powerful. Grief is so very hard to process. My grandmother died 25 years ago and ot still feels like yesterday 💔
Maybe I am just not convinced about the details, but did she dig that hole in the garden, and together, in broad daylight, they buried an accidental corpse? - with no nosy neighbour, in the middle of a city, not getting to see it?
Well, they didn’t bury the corpse…they refilled hole. They ended up calling the ambulance to pick up the body in the end, which is why you hear the siren approaching.
@taydestiny38 thank u. I thought they buried him
I loved the chemistry between Leon and Maggie.
She could have saved herself a whole lot of grief and 3 days of shoveling by just having her beloved cremated, and bury his urn or scatter his ashes in the garden, thereby fulfilling his wishes.
11:03
if you turn the english auto generated captions on, it's interesting how it says "thank you" out of the environment (sometimes it says "foreign" or "applause" by mistake), but it fits the scene so well
The trust is gone after someone locks me in the bathroom with a dead person. I'd absolutely not be going back to help someone who imprisoned me. There are other ways to have that conversation.
Yes, right. Glad that he eventually agreed to listen and she got the chance to give explanation and an offer of 500 which is also an offer of giving him the option to pick his own choice. A trust is established when he asked her to open the door while promised won't go anywhere and she believed him so unlocked him from the bathroom. The film is short that the part he puts sense into her head was leftout that it's not right to bury it there and she finally agreed not to. The ongoing in the last part works like a silent movie viewers fill in own interpretation. Effective short film.
The final smirk suggest she murdered the dead guy will now get away with it.
It actually makes me question just why we HAVE to bury our loved ones in a cemetery!!! We are so controlled if you think about it! A WISE MAN QUESTIONS EVERYTHING!
Because in 20 years when someone else buys the house, they don't want a random body in the back garden. Nor would the family want to have to visit their old house every time they want to visit their dead father/grandfather's grave.
Health and safety, also. A person needs to be buried 6 feet under, due to the smell, and any communicable disease. At that depth, a water pipe may be hit, or any underground power lines, or something foundational to any surrounding buildings, or walls, maybe.
@@daniellamcgee4251 I know it’s just made me think ya know? 😘
@@elirubenstein6810 I know just saying 😊
@@jennifergannuscio6086 I fully support thinking! That's why I responded to your question. Too many people on UA-cam want to shut people down who think. I am here for it!
Loved this. Its quite beautiful & reminds me of a few of my own life experiences which led to unexpected friendships.
you often help people with this problem? :D
@@martinpetersen6266 😆 You wouldnt believe the wonderful people & strange things Ive encountered on my travels ... fact truly can be stranger than fiction.
How many escorts you paid/had?
Just to clear up my comment refers to the young mans decency & how his not taking advantage of her in her grief stricken madness will have bonded & made them friends for life.
I have not buried bodies for anyone in my travels .. 😊
@@FIONA21ful just a little banter/humour, I understood what you're comment means, sorry 🙏 😂 👍 ✌️
Now that was a good one, never saw it coming.
i know its just a movie, but she would get in trouble and they will obviously find the body anyways in the backyard when people start wondering where he went.
True. That is why it doesn't make sense the dude refusing to accept the money.
@@albertoalmeida3424 he doesn't accept the money because he is a genuinely lovely guy who realised that she only needed help "letting go".
After the initial shock at the weird situation he thinks a little and decides to offer compassionate assistance. He returns and tells her he will help her to call the authorities. They then go together to the garden and he helps her to fill in the hole. At the end they are waiting for whoever they called to show up...
That was certainly interesting and enjoyable. A couple of twists and turns, that kind of threw me for a loop. Overall…well done!
This is a simple case of Schrodinger’s plot. The body is both buried and not. Bars
The ending is so tender and heartbreaking.
Had a real "Silence of the Lambs" meets "Get Out!" feel to it.
Oh, heartbreaking. And yes, chroniclemedia. He helped her, somehow, realize that she couldn't grant Philip his dearest wish - the world just doesn't work that way now. That's exactly what it meant when he said he'd make the call for her.
And then he helped her undo what she had done for Philip, in the garden. And waited with her, was waiting with her, for the ambulance, at the end. And wouldn't take anything more than seemed right to him, of what she'd planned to give him for his help.
So poignant. And the casting is perfect. An understated tour de force.
What a good man, Id have done the same especially after being in the funeral business and Loving my gardens.
You can't bury people or animals in your backyard because it can contaminate the water underneath it. Cemeteries are only allowed in some proper lands with the correct management of water flows.
Omeleto is my Favorite channel. Thank you for all.
Perfect casting, superb acting, and great cinematography. The premise was strange…and gave a surprisingly a good memorable jolt. However, the big question in my mind: Why could she not think to have him cremated, and then bury the ashes in the garden?😂
Whole new spin on “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande.”
Reminds me of a short film I saw many years ago. Cop moves into an apartment building with his little boy. Little boy goes missing. He asks a neighbor if he's seen him and finds out the neighbor has been tending to his dead wife's body in their apartment for some time with the belief she'll come back to life if he can maintain her body for x amount of time. The cop ends up the neighbor's prisoner. The neighbor tries to convince him his wife will resurrect. The cop tries to convince the neighbor she won't and to let him go. I want to say it was called "Going Home". Now I remember it was one of three films in "Three Extremes 2".
Dressing semi-formally means nice, but no tie or tux. A T-shirt is casual dress. GREAT short in all other respects. ❤
Glad that he eventually agreed to listen and she got the chance to give explanation and an offer of 500 which is also an offer of giving him the option to pick his own choice. A trust is established when he asked her to open the door while promised won't go anywhere and she believed him so unlocked him from the bathroom. The film is short that the part he puts sense into her head was leftout that it's not right to bury it there and she finally agreed not to. The ongoing in the last part works like a silent movie viewers fill in own interpretation. Effective short film.
By far, one of Omeleto's best yet!
This was a very good movie. well made and played. I am glad I found this channel.
Excellent acting from two fine Actors.
OK. Juliet Stevenson. I knew the actress looked familiar. Very well done short film!
MASTERFUL. So much unsaid, unseen, unexplained. But everything understood.
Juliet Stevenson is a superb actress and it's so awesome that u have her starring in one of ur very fine films.....but please stop calling her "old" because she's not and it's not very nice! Come on guys!
No one is mentioning she kidnapped him . Also why didn't he kick out the window and at least scream for help ???
How would he explain his presence there? "Oh, I'm just the g she hired for the night..."
This is the best Omleto I have ever seen!
I hope the same happens to me. I don't want medical " professionals touching my corpse.
Never saw that coming...got me thinking in so many ways
This could be the basis for a good solid friendship 😅
WHY is the bathroom window DOUBLE LOCKED ? who does that??
An interesting thriller with a thought-provoking theme 🌻
Thanks for uploading it🌺👍
I'd almost - but not quite - forgotten how excellent an actress Juliet Stevenson is. And Anthony Welsh is great in this too.
A Very very good and sad story😢😢👍👍👏👏👏👏💛🧡🧡🧡Well done!
So people in the comments tend to just believe she didn't kill him. Interesting.
You can believe anything you like, it's upto you to translate it..it's not set in stone, so believe what you will.. also, it's just a story.
Of course they don’t because of how she looks, as society has been told. 😅
I watch true crime alot. They both could go to prison for that...
I can see this having an horror twist. She locks the Escort into the bathroom so the deceased ( which would really be some sort of human flesh eating monster or a vampire ) eats and chews him up alive. Viewers could hear the bones crushing and the horrified screams as the escort pleads in anguish.
That touched a string. Many people are cursing me for cremating a family member and keeping the ashes at home, instead of burying him at cementry.
this shows the absurdity of our current culture. When we know what is right and what is wrong, we should not entertain the wrong just so someone can feel good, because when we do that it shifts our perception of reality. Delusions of grandeur should not be entertained, especially not when it affects and hurts everyone.
One of the best yet
Edward Abbey (an amerikan writer from the southwest), was dying of stomach cancer. He asked his closest friends to bury his body in a place that was special to him in the desert he so loved, where no one would find him. They honored his request. Graham Parsons (amerikan singer/songwriter) requested the same thing. An episode of 6' Under also had a scene with a secret burial. It's not that unusual. I'm sure it happens more than we're aware of: secret burials.
I knew I recognized Juliet Stevenson. Great actress.
Juliet Stevenson - fine performance. Loved her in Bend it like Beckham.
You think for one minute that door, or window is going to keep me in that bathroom? lol. Right.
in my country (US) and state of Oregon we are able to bury family on our own property. Of course we need to inform the authorities and they make sure the person died of natural causes or that it wasn't foul play....but then we can bury family. I suppose if it was foul play you could still bury the person on your own property as long as the person doing the buring didn't do the killing. Morbid but there you have it.
Good story. Sweet and to the point.
Juliet Stevenson is an Excellent Fantastic British actress .... she wa superb in madly, deeply etc.... would love to see her in more TV and film
Such a schocking, yet not unbelievable situation. Whatever happened, the ending was very touching. The actress seemed familiar from other films. Anyone know who she is?
Original, superb performances and masterfully directed!
Poignantly beautiful. The initial horrifying thoughts she might have drugged his drink, classic la la la as in most thrillers 🤨 Love the element of surprise Omeleto's vids usually carry. Bravi!!!!
how does he know she didn't kill him?
She tried to call an ambulance when he was leaving.
When you think there is only one desired outcome but the best outcome wont cost you a fortune or compromise your feelings.
This just makes me sad for Europeans. Currently, I live in a very rural part of the u.s., where you can bury whoever you want on your property, but after many years of living in different European countries, I realized this was a special thing. I spent years in Germany before finding out it was illegal to bury your dead pet in your own backyard. There is such a thing as property rights, and people should have the right to be buried (for free) on their own property.
So well done!
I’d never be able to kick that window out.
That was Great! I Love Your work
Before I lost this is this going to be a skittles moment or some Kool-Aid misidentification?
Unexpected story telling, well done.
Isn't this the actress who played Keira Knightley's mom in Bend it like Beckham?
THIS SCENE OF LOCKING A GUY WITH DEAD MEN I SAW RECENTLY IN DJ TILLU MOVIE
Why there was a padlock on the bathroom windows?
She had planned this situation over a three day period.
so touching.
Ok am going to watch this again as loved it first time around ❤❤
Very sweet and unexpected... ~ Amy 😍
Hey 👋 how are you doing?
beautiful masterpiece!! thank you so much
This was fabulous!
Superb! 💗
Great job cast and crew. What did they do?
I feel they will be spending a lot of time together.
Not if he had any sense
Not when he gives her a yeast infection or vd from being an escort.
Could have gotten his ashes and buried his ashes in the garden. What the heck.
I don't think they buried her husband, either, as some others have already said. Their clothing was far too clean when they were filling the hole in the garden. And there was a sort of playful attitude between them. I wouldn't be that calm after burying someone.
I think her additional reason is to keep getting her husband's regular payments as long as possible, eg his salary or pension or whatsover. May be she is afraid of loosing her house.
To avoid any blackmail she could bring the body down by separate parts
Why isn't anybody noticing the freaky smile at the end? She murdered him.
Loved her since Truly, madly, deeply.