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Clothes are falling hearts are d
Clothes are falling hearts are d













clothes are falling hearts are d
  1. #CLOTHES ARE FALLING HEARTS ARE D MOVIE#
  2. #CLOTHES ARE FALLING HEARTS ARE D LICENSE#
clothes are falling hearts are d

Of course, Foster himself doesn't know that.

#CLOTHES ARE FALLING HEARTS ARE D LICENSE#

Artistic License – Law: In real life, Foster's crimes and his Suicide by Cop would leave his family with nothing, because insurance companies don't pay out benefits for losses incurred during the commission of a felony.Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: Prendergast quips that his roast chicken at home is drying out in the oven on top of everything else Foster caused just because he "got angry".Armored Closet Gay: Possibly Nick the Nazi, who graphically fantasizes about Foster getting Prison Raped by a black man.

#CLOTHES ARE FALLING HEARTS ARE D MOVIE#

  • Anti-Villain: William "D-FENS" Foster is dangerously insane and becomes increasingly violent, but at the same time he's also clearly a victim of powers beyond his control, and the audience is encouraged to feel catharsis through his actions even as the movie condemns them.
  • Angry White Man: Foster is this of a sort, believing that the system he worked for screwed him over and having grievances with anyone who doesn't have basic respect for American culture, economy, language, or even just simple human decency, but he ultimately becomes a Deconstructed Character Archetype.
  • Pretty much every single one of Foster’s outbursts in the movie is a result of people being rude to him.
  • An Aesop: Going Postal is not a good way to deal with life.
  • However, it's implied that Foster only drew a gun because the manager was very rude to him.
  • All for Nothing: Foster pulls out a gun at Whammy Burger because the manager refused to serve him breakfast only to later decide that he doesn’t want breakfast anymore and orders from the lunch menu.
  • He just realized that he really is the villain in all of this, decides he's too far gone to be redeemed, and commits Suicide by Cop so his wife and daughter will have at least something to benefit from his death.
  • Alas, Poor Villain: Foster himself in the end.
  • After getting over his initial shock, the Captain cracks a smile since the man he believed to be craven had the balls to do that. Towards the end, Prendergast tells the Captain to go fuck himself on national television.
  • Actually Pretty Funny: Prendergast's boss Captain Yardley dislikes him because he took a desk job and because he doesn't curse.
  • Actor Allusion: Foster, seeing a plastic surgeon's luxurious home, remarks that he chose the wrong career, echoing a similar lament by Michael Douglas's character, Jack Colton, in Romancing the Stone.
  • Abusive Offspring: Foster was cruel to his mom, even blaming her for his failed marriage.
  • Abhorrent Admirer: Nick the Neo-Nazi to Bill Foster.
  • It's even used in the trailer: "Life in the Nineties got you down?"
  • The '90s: Smog chokes the Los Angeles cityscape on a 110-degree day as Howard Stern blares through construction sites and tinny car radios and flashy rollerbladers go by along the cluttered beach.














  • Clothes are falling hearts are d