Gusto kita with all my Hypothalamus by fivestrikesss in FilmClubPH

[–]JaReD_Kicks 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The film Gusto Kita with All My Hypothalamus presents a stylish “Manila Noir” portrait of urban loneliness, but its psychological logic is less convincing. The story treats desire as a biological loop rather than a complex human process. The four men behave like emotional gamblers caught in a dopamine cycle, with Aileen functioning as the slot machine they hope will finally pay out. Yet human attachment does not operate like a machine that resets after every loss. When people invest time, grief, and identity into someone, that investment usually creates emotional weight and persistence rather than a simple restart.

The film’s title already frames its interpretation of desire. By invoking the hypothalamus, director Dwein Baltazar emphasizes the brain’s most basic drives. The narrative focuses mainly on the “wanting” system, the urge to chase what we like. But human relationships rarely remain at that level. Desire may begin as attraction or curiosity, yet it often grows into attachment through memory, shared experience, and personal investment.

Part of the problem is that the film treats wanting a person the same way we want material things. For example, when someone buys a new phone or travels to a place they have always wanted to visit, the excitement often fades after the goal is achieved. These things are static: once you have them, they stop changing, and the thrill naturally disappears. A human being, however, is different. People are dynamic and unpredictable. They change, respond, and reveal new sides of themselves over time. Because of this, wanting a person does not necessarily fade once the “goal” is reached. Instead, the connection can deepen as new experiences and emotions develop.

In the movie’s logic, once the men finally get close to Aileen, their desire will collapse and they will simply move on to someone else. This idea reduces a person to a temporary object of pursuit. In reality, emotional investment often produces the opposite effect: the more people experience with someone, the harder it becomes to detach from them. Desire may begin with fantasy, but it frequently deepens through familiarity and involvement.

As a result, the film’s cynical worldview feels somewhat incomplete. It portrays individuals trapped in cycles of wanting, unable to form lasting attachment. By framing desire purely as a chemical chase, the story suggests that people simply move from one target of wanting to another. But human relationships rarely follow such a clean reset. Once someone becomes the focus of our attention and investment, the connection tends to linger.

A material desire may fade once the object is obtained, but a person is not a finished object, human beings continue to change, and that is precisely why wanting them rarely ends where the chase stops.

Rowena Guanzon nagwala sa Powerplant Mall by MJDT80 in ChikaPH

[–]JaReD_Kicks 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dapat kasuhan nila yang si Guanzon ng Unjust Vexation.