Are you assuming that the person outraged doesn't want to know anything about the movie?
The person who is outraged over learning about what happens in the opening scene of a movie? If I'm writing a review, yes, I guess I am going to assume that. Because I cannot know (much less comprehend) all the nuances of what every reader considers to be a spoiler. "Some people want to know some things but not other things" may be a more accurate premise, but it doesn't offer any functional benefit for the writer.
But I read the key as that it was a surprise that happened at the opening of the movie, not just any thing. Which is why Matt's analogy to Darla sounded right. Not everything in every opening ten minutes of the movie falls into that category.
In the example I was using, the analogy to Darla is right on -- it's a surprise that sets the tone for the rest, because it's not what you were expecting just from looking.
what movie sparked this discussion in the first place?
I was keeping it a secret! It's
The American.
And what happens in the opening scene (apparently) is that
George Clooney wakes up in bed with a woman, gets a phone call, and shoots her.
ha! sorry. I'm a secret buster, apparently. Well, thank you for sharing that. Given the plot of the movie, I'm not sure why that opening scene is a surprise. Going in, marginally knowing the plot (I don't really know much about the movie except the basic plot), I kind of expect something like that early in the film.
I heard the movie is
boring, so I think I'm going to rent it.
It's not
boring!
It's
an art film!
From what I read.
ha!
It's not boring, it's art!
I knew there was a twist to be discovered, and early in the movie they focused on Jaye's fake nails. For some reason that tipped me off.
I know folks who figured it was Forrest Whitaker getting offed so suddenly the way he did that was the big twist, and so weren't expecting anything else.
Speaking of art that's not boring, I just got back from
Le Concert.
It was more lighthearted than you would think a Franco-Russian film would be. Basically, it was a sports movie, but about Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto. Plus, Mélanie Laurent.