Because the last page makes it less obvious the book has been mutilated and will be discovered long after he's gone. Except in my house; I read the end first.
You think it was that deliberate? I thought it was just Don not giving a shit.
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
Because the last page makes it less obvious the book has been mutilated and will be discovered long after he's gone. Except in my house; I read the end first.
You think it was that deliberate? I thought it was just Don not giving a shit.
Not really. Just looking at other possibilities in the generic. I'm totally of the opinion that Don is one of the most self-centered pricks I've ever met. Yet, you can see his unhappiness with so many things, but he can't stop being the jerk he is. I thought I saw him pause just a second before he tore that last page out, but that could be my wish fullfillment that Don would finally get a clue and quit being a total ass.
Hec would know better than me on this, but I think it's really just in the last generation or so that we got the idea that it would be dangerous fashion death to let anyone other than a pro touch it.
Haircutting technique pre-Sassoon wasn't that complicated. That's why after Vidal it was called "precision" haircutting. Think of the scene in Roman Holiday where Audrey Hepburn's character gets her hair cut. The guy just back combs it a bit and then whacks it off.
The emphasis was much more on styling than cutting back then. (There are some exceptions - razor cutting was already established by the early sixties. Layering for women's hair became common in the early fifties with the advent of the Italian Cut. But even then most women had their hair permanently waved which obviated the need for precise lines. The emphasis on cutting technique then was getting the layers even because that affected how the hair would set.)
You think it was that deliberate? I thought it was just Don not giving a shit.
I think it was deliberate. He wants to disappear again, hence waiting until no one was around to make that call.
I also thought it was a really deliberate contrast to his sending the book at the beginning and having written the inscription at the beginning.
Oh, and aside, I loved the choice of "What'll I Do?" as the song playing as Don's luggage was delivered to the apparently deserted (at least for the moment) house.
But I'm totally with Hec-- he has to return at some point. The question is, when, exactly, and what's he going to find when he does come back?
That's why after Vidal it was called "precision" haircutting.
Did Mary Quant have one of the first Vidal cuts or was hers simply attributed to her?
Did Mary Quant have one of the first Vidal cuts or was hers simply attributed to her?
They were close friends and aesthetic allies. She wasn't the first one to sport a Sassoon cut, but was one of the most prominent early adopters.
There's a really cool book about the swinging sixties in London titled Ready Steady Go with detailed backstories on all the players in Soho and Chelsea. This is back when Terrence Stamp and Michael Caine were the to It Boys of London and pulled more birds than Gene Simmons or Wilt Chamberlain could ever imagine.
It's by far the best cultural history of that time and era.
I wonder if Don doesn't think that he has anything to lose. He's not happy at work (and did we all notice that Duck's only non negotiable in the deal was that Creative reports to him), Betty won't even let him in the house. Why shouldn't he leave?
I thought Don was missing his kids when he saw the other two show up (and gave them his and Joy's room) and was calling his house to talk to them. I should have known that wouldn't be a Don move.
Roger has lost his damned mind.
More Joan, please!
More Joan, please!
Always!
Joan Holloway Will Have Her Revenge On Sterling Cooper! t /Nirvana
I think it was deliberate. He wants to disappear again, hence waiting until no one was around to make that call.
I meant deliberately defacing the book - I get why he wouldn't want the phone number or address or whatever lying around, but I don't think he even noticed he was tearing out The Last Page Of A Book vs The Nearest Piece Of Paper.