i think that its about someone who is about to die and they are in the hospital with all their family and friends around and i think that there is actually two "voices because theres one thats saying its alright for me to die theres beauty in release and then theres the other one syaing i don't blame you for quitting i know you really tried so i think its about two people trying to make peace with eachother and death.
@freckles555@Kilroy412 is WRONG. The Internet, actor's rep, or Crowe,or both, who this song is written about, can't completely scrub virtual history. Look at the comments by Freckles, and from 2 decades ago, vs Kilroy's more recent group, the oldest being 5 years ago.
@freckles555@Kilroy412 is WRONG. The Internet, actor's rep, or Crowe,or both, who this song is written about, can't completely scrub virtual history. Look at the comments by Freckles, and from 2 decades ago, vs Kilroy's more recent group, the oldest being 5 years ago.
It's 2025. I'm doubling down. Here's why. I recently saw the old film K-PAX, again, and this song plays in the credits. Reminded of who and why it was written, I did a Google search. But all references to Crowe writing about a "friend's near unaliving", disappeared. Is it the Mandela Effect, or early dementia? So when...
It's 2025. I'm doubling down. Here's why. I recently saw the old film K-PAX, again, and this song plays in the credits. Reminded of who and why it was written, I did a Google search. But all references to Crowe writing about a "friend's near unaliving", disappeared. Is it the Mandela Effect, or early dementia? So when I ran into a friend the same age as me the other day, I asked if he remembered the song "Safe and Sound". "Oh yeah. That was the song about Owen Wilson's unalive attempt."
The theme perfectly aligns with the lyrics. K-PAX isn't a banal film about sad, romantic relationships that don't work out, or it would've been at the end credits of Wilson's buddy, Vince Vaughn's "The Break Up".
i think that its about someone who is about to die and they are in the hospital with all their family and friends around and i think that there is actually two "voices because theres one thats saying its alright for me to die theres beauty in release and then theres the other one syaing i don't blame you for quitting i know you really tried so i think its about two people trying to make peace with eachother and death.
@freckles555 closest comment to the meaning I\'ve heard this far
@freckles555 closest comment to the meaning I\'ve heard this far
@freckles555 closest comment to the meaning I\'ve heard this far
@freckles555 closest comment to the meaning I\'ve heard this far
@blkshpnation - actually, not in the slightest. It’s about her relationship with Owen Wilson.
@blkshpnation - actually, not in the slightest. It’s about her relationship with Owen Wilson.
@freckles555 @Kilroy412 is WRONG. The Internet, actor's rep, or Crowe,or both, who this song is written about, can't completely scrub virtual history. Look at the comments by Freckles, and from 2 decades ago, vs Kilroy's more recent group, the oldest being 5 years ago.
@freckles555 @Kilroy412 is WRONG. The Internet, actor's rep, or Crowe,or both, who this song is written about, can't completely scrub virtual history. Look at the comments by Freckles, and from 2 decades ago, vs Kilroy's more recent group, the oldest being 5 years ago.
It's 2025. I'm doubling down. Here's why. I recently saw the old film K-PAX, again, and this song plays in the credits. Reminded of who and why it was written, I did a Google search. But all references to Crowe writing about a "friend's near unaliving", disappeared. Is it the Mandela Effect, or early dementia? So when...
It's 2025. I'm doubling down. Here's why. I recently saw the old film K-PAX, again, and this song plays in the credits. Reminded of who and why it was written, I did a Google search. But all references to Crowe writing about a "friend's near unaliving", disappeared. Is it the Mandela Effect, or early dementia? So when I ran into a friend the same age as me the other day, I asked if he remembered the song "Safe and Sound". "Oh yeah. That was the song about Owen Wilson's unalive attempt."
The theme perfectly aligns with the lyrics. K-PAX isn't a banal film about sad, romantic relationships that don't work out, or it would've been at the end credits of Wilson's buddy, Vince Vaughn's "The Break Up".