Nutty, I'm totally with you about
the child and the men not caring who the father is.
What mystifies me, however, are the scenes where
one is thrilled to encounter the wife and child on the street, where one is happy to say he loves Sarah and then another is mis-er-able with her.
I can see
sharing everything...but purposely promoting misery?
What is the point of that?
I had the same issue, Beej. I mean,
I understand that sharing everything is their whole life, etc etc, but in cases where one has a clear preference...why?
Though I suppose you could make the argument that
the ruse would fall apart if both of them didn't know everything, down to the most intimate details, about both lives.
I'm with Beej. I don't see what the point of that would be.
Note on the Prestige:
One brother was named Albert and the other Frederick. They smooshed their names together to make Alfred.
Aha! Is that from the book? Is the book good?
It is from the book. And the book is excellent. I just finished reading it about a week and a half ago--I picked it up by chance long before I knew there was a movie coming out. The style is enchanting.
continued--
I also will not be surprised if there are some things from the book not included in the movie. But from reading the WF I think the reveals are much easier to comprehend in the movie from the book. With the book I walked around for days afterwards, chewing over possibilities... you weren't sure, by the end of it, whether
Borden was actually twins or not. It wasn't made explicitly clear, only Occam's Razor kind of clear. Angier's secret was both more straightforward and more diabolical at the same time. You got to the end of it and were simply horrified.
I really do reccomend it.
Though I suppose you could make the argument that the ruse would fall apart if both of them didn't know everything, down to the most intimate details, about both lives.
Well, from what little we've seen of them, my assessment was
that they just don't know how to do it any other way. Having made that commitment to a single identity, they didn't have any serious coping mechanisms for what would happen if they stopped working together.
Which was the chief thing I was wondering, as I left the theatre. What
is Alfred going to do now? Aside from being be severely hampered in his career, and oh by the way officially dead in the eyes of the law, he's lost half of himself. I worried, a bit, about how lonely he would be, going forward.
Nutty
I thought maybe he would take Angier's identity and money and start over somewhere else.