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In Reply to: Re: Cache -- Drama drunk on barbituates . . . posted by PhilJ on July 2, 2006 at 05:43:23:
I think it served as an explanation as to how the Arab could have carried a grudge over so many decades. As Autieul explaned, he was so young he hardly remembered--which is true of human nature at that age. What I don't get is the Arab's son being so complicit in his father's smoldering anger.
Follow Ups:
The one in front of the school. The lack of camera movement makes it seem like another mystery tape. If so, there are three possibilities that I see:1) The Arab (Majid) was filming the tapes, and this was the last one before his... well... you know...
2) The Arab's son was responsible for the tapes, and he plans to continue the bizarre stalking.
3) Somebody else????
I understood the movie better (especially the abrupt ending) after watching the director's commentary. He says that the film is about guilt, and how one deals with guilt. This particular movie was about Autieul's character's (Laurent) guilt, so it doesn't matter who was responsible for the tapes and pictures. If Majid was responsible, the audience might have wanted to partially forgive Laurent for his actions, but in the director's eyes, different cupabilities should be viewed and examined independently.
Cheers,
Chris
"Music is God's gift to man, the only art of Heaven given to earth, the only art of earth we take to Heaven."
-Walter Savage Landor
I see your point. I was rather mystified but ready to watch the previews then be done with the disk. So, I just didn't get much from the school scene but I do see the posssibilities you listed.Maybe there will be Cache 2?
So the kid had something unfair done to him... wow... that's the reason to live like a pig?In the society where everything bad that happens to you is always someone else's fault such a message of course resonates strongly.
The film, quite simply, is about revenge, unfortutunately one of our most primitive instincts.
If you think this is about one man and one incident I suggest you study up on the French treatment of the Algerians.
Well... they certainly lived poorly, but they never developed the victimhood complex simply because half of their country was burnt down and untold numbers of them machine gunned into ravines by the Germans.All that stuff about past collective crimes is something interesting from historical perspective, but has nothing at all to do with the individual lives.
as
You are looking for victimhood in the whoge neignborhood, buddy.Show me a Jew who lived like a pig because of the Holocaust. They go and become Nobel Prize winners instead.
Your victim mentality is plain silly. Instead of giving those who promote it pat and blessing, you should object to it.
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