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    • Camberwell High School

      • Camberwell High School, a public secondary school in Victoria, was used as the filming location for William Dawes Elementary.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowing_(film)
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  2. The school in the movie is William Dawes Elementary. William Dawes was one of the riders who, like Paul Revere, warned the minutemen that British troops were coming, just as a child at his namesake school was trying to warn people what was coming.

    • Why Did The Whisper People Save Caleb & Abby?
    • Why Did The Whisper People Give Caleb & Abby Rabbits?
    • Knowing's Religious Themes Explained
    • The Real Meaning of Knowing's Ending
    • Why The Final Shot in Knowing Ruined An Intriguing Ending
    • How Director Alex Proyas Explains Knowing and Its Ending

    John Koestler's kids are central to why some still want the Knowing ending explained. It seems odd that the alien race chose to save Caleb and Abby and raise two strange human children, but it was so the human race could start again. The aliens' "whispering" is a form of selection, and only the chosen get a ticket off-world (Caleb and Abby are two ...

    One of the most bewildering aspects of Knowing's ending is the way that Caleb and Abby are both depicted holding rabbits shortly before leaving with the aliens. This isn't directly addressed by the film, but the rabbits are seen arriving safely on the alien planet with the children in Knowing's final moments. While the rabbit's place in the new wor...

    Knowing draws on a lot of biblical inspiration, most notably in its handling of the idea of prophecy and the apocalypse. While it's certainly not the first sci-fi film to tackle biblical symbolism – just look at Dune's messiah/Chosen One prophecy – Knowing actually explores a wide array of religious themes. The most obvious is the film's use of pro...

    Maybe to say that Knowing is a film of many layers is to give it too much credit, but there certainly are a lot of themes and inspirations at play, and that's ultimately what makes its ending a little confusing. By including so much religious allegory, Knowingactually sets up its own ending relatively early on by foreshadowing Nicolas Cage's charac...

    From the 1936 earthquake musical San Francisco to 1998's Armageddon, 2004's Day After Tomorrow, and 2021's Don't Look Up, disaster and apocalypse movies both do well at the box office and deliver spectacles that last long in viewers' memories. Knowing could have been one of the most highly-regarded disaster movies so far, especially with the unique...

    With a lot to unpack, the best person to offer a little insight on the Knowing ending is the movie's director Alex Proyas. Having directedDark City and The Crow, Proyas is used to making genre movies with big ideas and concepts that fans can read a lot into. When it comes to the interpretations of Knowing as a biblical story, Proyas doesn't discour...

    • Colin Mccormick
  3. Aug 21, 2024 · Fifty years later, the time capsule is unearthed, and the current batch of William Dawes Elementary School gets the drawings that have been preserved in the capsule. Lucinda’s numerical codes find their way to Caleb Koestler, the 9-year-old son of widowed MIT astrophysics professor John Koestler.

  4. Across the Web. Knowing on DVD July 7, 2009 starring Nicolas Cage, Rose Byrne, Ben Mendelsohn, Adrienne Pickering. In 1958, as part of the dedication ceremony for a new elementary school, a group of students is asked to draw pictures to be stored in a tim.

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    • Nicolas Cage
    • Alex Proyas
  5. Aug 14, 2023 · Knowing has one of the wackiest endings of the century. But what exactly happens with Nicolas Cage's John in the movie? And is the apocalypse averted?

    • Senior Writer
  6. In 1959, a Lexington, Massachusetts elementary school celebrates its opening with a competition in which students draw what they believe will happen in the future. All the children create visual works except for Lucinda Embry.

  7. Plot. In 1959, a Lexington, Massachusetts elementary school celebrates its opening with a competition in which students draw what they believe will happen in the future. All the children create visual works except for Lucinda Embry. Guided by whispering voices, Lucinda fills her paper with a series of numbers.