In an astounding feat of mental gymnastics, acclaimed video essayist The Intellectual Gamer's (TIG) latest YouTube video spends two hours and 42 minutes breaking down why Sifu reminds him of No Country For Old Men – the movie, not the book, as specified by TIG at minute 36.
The thesis of TIG's video, opened with a paragraph from Diana Athill's 2009 memoir, Somewhere Towards the End, which fades from the screen too quickly for the reader to finish, is such: «In Sifu, as you progress through the game, you get older and older. And also, you're in a country: China. Which, given the number of people you must fight in Sifu, you might say, is …» At this point, TIG lowers his voice to nearly a whisper to emphasize his point but mostly sounding creepy. "… no country for old men."
Throughout the video, found here at the link, TIG lays out his argument, never indicating what themes from either media are even remotely similar rather than drawing a parallel between the name No Country For Old Men and the fact that Sifu has a mostly-maligned mechanic where the character ages.
Bringing his thesis to a personal level and couched between ad reads for Manscaped and Nord VPN, TIG reveals we, too, are aging. «I'd like to leave you with one thought. All of us will be old one day,» TIG astutely says in the video. «When that happens, what country will there be for us? Until then, I'll Sifu on the other side.»
At the time of writing, TIG's video, aptly titled, «The fragility of life, as viewed through the lens of martial arts and Tommy Lee Jones,» has received almost universal acclaim from various echo chambers around the internet. While some pointed out his core thesis could've been relayed in about 30 seconds – and even then, hardly
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