The question of
murder vs. suicide
was big in my crowd. Lots of existential agita. And, while I'd like to think that Angier believed the
drowning is like going home line, he watched his own wife drown with terror in her eyes, screaming his name. How could he delude himself after that
?
Another interesting question that came up was, Why would Bolton and Fallon
switch lovers? If one loved Sarah and the other loved Scarlett, why wouldn't they stay with their respective happy-mates?
I guessed that they did this to cover up any
potenial 'tells' about there being two Bales.
If one sees minor differences with enough consistency, does one's mind forget them?
Also, when Sarah said,"
I know what you are." Did she mean that she knew there were two Bales?
I couldn't quite work that one out.
Beej, I don't think
Borden and Fallon did switch lovers.
Borden says that
they each loved a separate woman; that was the only difference between them.
One question I had about The Prestige was
I got the weird impression that Borden and Fallon somehow switched places in their last prison visit, even though I couldn't see how it was possible. I felt that way because of the look to the guard at the end and because earlier in the film the one in prison is very worried about the daughter, but in the end it is the one out of prison who was her true father.
The weakest part of
The Departed
for me was by far the sudden
explosion of moles. Assuming Delahunt really was a cop...it makes the conversation make sense, but damn. What team was he a mole for?
It really diluted things for me.
For you Prestige-watching people, had any of you read the Christopher Priest book first? If so, did that add or subtract to the experience? As I recall, Mely had and enjoyed the film.
I'm just wondering if I should read it, then see it, or see it, then read it.
I haven't read the book, but now I want to. Reading the book first almost always spoils the movie experience for me.
P-C, I got the distinct impression that they did
switch back and forth.
Not the least of which, because of the
"not today" response to
Sarah asking,
"Do you love me?"
Didn't Borden (forgive my mispelling upthread...may Michael forgive me too) say as much at one point?
Yeah, that is a good point, Beej. I'm not sure.
I've read the book, and now I'm itching to watch the film. I think it'll only enhance the viewing.
I watched the film, and then went out and bought the book. Which I will read when I can scrape together some spare time.