philosophy in film

One set of reactionary thugs [the government of the Shah of Iran] is displaced by another set of reactionary thugs [the Ayatollahs]. Behrani then becomes another fleck of detritus in the march of human history
A speck of sand in the fog that human interaction can become.

HOUSE OF SAND AND FOG
Written and directed by Vadim Perelman

[b]Connie: $500? They evicted you from your house for that?
Kathy: You got it.

Kathy: My father left this house to me and my brother.
Behrani: Tell this to the bureaucrats at the County Tax Office. They have made a mistake, not I.
Kathy: They said they’d give you your money back. You’ve put that deck on. I’m sure they’d repay you for that.
Behrani: I’m sorry, but I’ve nothing more to say. Why should I be penalized for their incompetence? You should sue them for enough to buy ten homes. I’ll even sell you this house for the right price. That’s all I require.
Kathy: You can’t expect to just move in here and make money off of this. This is my house. I lived here, and you stole this house from me, you son of a bitch! [then to prospective buyers] This is a stolen house! He’s trying to sell you a stolen house!

Kathy: I miss my dad. He worked really hard for that house. It took him thirty years to pay it off. And it took me eight months to fuck it up!

Lester: [at Kathy’s car] So, how’s the El Rancho?
Kathy: I’m not there anymore. I’m staying at the Bonneville now.
Lester: I don’t know it.
Kathy: [dryly] You’re looking at it.

Cashier: Rough night, huh?
Kathy: Seems to be heading in that direction…

Lester: I’m talking about the disclosure law, Colonel. You, as the owner, have the obligation to tell all prospective buyers anything about the property they have a right to know.
Behrani: I do not understand.
Lester: You sure about that?
Behrani: Are you interrogating me, Mr. Gonzalez?
Lester: I don’t know. You tell me. I understand your friend, the Shah, made a habit of it.

Nadi: Who was that man? Tell to me, Behrani. What have you done?
Behrani: It’s none of your business what I have done. Have you no faith in me, no respect? That man said I must remove the sign.
Nadi: Coward! Liar!
Esmail: Mama.
Nadi: You kasif liar! It is your fault we were forced to flee from Iran. It is your fault we are here. Yours and your Savak friends!

Esmail: Why did that man say we would be deported?
Behrani: I do not know. But we are American citizens. We own this house. They can do nothing to us now.
Esmail: I feel bad for that lady, Bawbaw-jahn.
Behrani: The woman’s house was taken from her because she did not pay her taxes. That happens when one is not responsible.
Esmail: But…
Behrani: Do you understand? Do not feel bad. Americans they do not deserve what they have. They have the eyes of small children who are forever looking for the next source of distraction, entertainment, sweet taste in the mouth. We are not like them. We know rich opportunities when we see them and do not throw away God’s blessing.

Behrani: Please, God, don’t take my joon-am. I make my nazr. My nazr, hear me. Please to hear me. I will give everything to one who is less fortunate. Yes! I will make it for the broken bird. Please, God, I’m making nazr to this woman. To Kathy Nicolo. And I to you promise, if you heal my son, I will return her father’s house. I will also give to her all the money I have. My God, Khoda. I make nazr only for my son. Please, I want only for my son. I beg you, I will do whatever is your will. I will purchase ten kilos of the finest seed and find an American mosque, and I will feed them to all the birds outside. I will let the birds cover me and peck out my eyes. Please, God, my nazr is in your hands.[/b]

What else is there? But God has other plans.

Policeman: Are you Kathy Nicolo?
Kathy: Yeah.
Policeman: Is this your house?
Kathy: No, it’s not my house.

A film less about birth than death. And how the part in the middle – life – can be bursting at the seams with deceipt. Oh, and Nicole Kidman naked in the bathtub with a naked ten year old boy. Which “disturbed” many and became the focal point for many more. That’s when the film became about pedophilia.

At least the film was made. Can you imagine if it was the other way around: Anna had died and returned as a 10 year old girl.

BIRTH
Directed by Jonathan Glazer

[b]Voice of Sean: Ok, let me say this… If I lost my wife and, uh, the next day, a little bird landed on my windowsill, looked me right in the eye, and in plain English said, ‘Sean, it’s me, Anna. I’m back’ What could I say? I guess I’d believe her. Or I’d want to. I’d be stuck with a bird. But other than that, no. I’m a man of science. I just don’t believe that mumbo-jumbo. Now, that’s gonna have to be the last question. I need to go running before I head home.

Anna: You know I loved Sean so much, and its been so long that I still can’t get him out of my system. This is going to sound a little strange but I’ve met someone, who seems to be Sean. I really hoped that he was Sean. I wanted him to be Sean. But I knew he wasn’t…The thing is, I’m falling in love with Sean again. That’s what’s happening. I need you to tell him to go away. Because I can’t do it.

Bob: You know… if you were my brother-in-law, you’d say it was impossible for you to be sitting right here in front of me. You didn’t believe in life after death. You believed that only matter survives and that the mind, soul, spirit… whatever you want to call it… disappears forever.

Anna: How are you gonna fulfill my needs?
Sean: I know what you’re talking about.
Anna: You’re ready for that? You ever made love to a girl?
Sean: You’d be the first.

Clara: You’re not Sean.
Sean: Yes, I am.
Clara: When you opened the door for me yesterday…I knew you weren’t Sean.
Sean: Who are you?
Clara: I thought you said you’re Sean. I’m your lover.
Sean: Anna’s my lover.
Clara: I’m your lover. Anna’s your wife. If you had been Sean…and I kind of hoped you had…you would’ve come to me first. And I would’ve explored this. But you didn’t.

Anna: You certainly had me fooled. I thought you were my dead husband…but you’re just a little boy in my bathtub.

Anna [to Joseph]: What happened to me was not my fault. There’s no way I could’ve behaved any differently, you know. What I did… wasn’t my fault. What happened to me wasn’t my fault, and I can’t be held accountable for it. There’s no way I could ever have said to him…“Go away.” I couldn’t do it.[/b]

We’re the kids of America!!
Another slice of the elephant.
But I have always been a sucker for the “loner”.
In part, this film explores the gap between what does happen and what you think you’ll able be to convince others happens instead.
In this world you sometimes have to roll the dice. If only because explaining why it happened is deemed too fucking hard.

PARANOID PARK
Written and directed by Gus Van Zant

[b]Macy: They should be out now, dude.
Alex: What are you talkin’ about?
Macy: The war, Iraq, no? What do you think?
Alex: I really don’t care.
Macy: Geez… that’s the kind of thing that’s wrong with people today. Apathy…not caring
Alex: I don’t really know much about the war.
Macy: Figure it out, dude. Read the newspaper.
Alex: I hate reading the newspaper.

Alex: One appeal of a place like Paranoid was the kids that skated there. They had built the park illegally all by themselves. Trainhoppers… guitar punks… skate… drunks… throwaway kids… No matter how bad your family life was, these guys had it much worse.

Alex: Macy… you know there’s just… everybody’s parents get divorced. There’s… other problems. Bigger problems.
Macy: Like what?
Alex: Like… people dying in Iraq… starving kids in Africa.
Macy: Since when do you care about starving children in Africa?
Alex: Well, you know what I mean, just… the little problems, they’re just all so stupid.
Macy: Not if it’s happening to you.

Alex [struggling to come to grips with what happened]: He was trying to kill us. He had a lead bat. Why… why can’t you just understand that…God…you know…Call the police. It’s OK, Alex, you’re not gonna get in trouble. Call home…Call someone. It was self-defense. I thought about my skateboard…People defend themselves all the time. But never mind that…I had to tell someone. Maybe that was the thing…It’s OK, Alex. You’re not gonna get in trouble. It’s OK. Get a lawyer first…then call the police. That’s what sports people did…Just calm down, Alex… Didn’t it? My brain could have debates all night long. My body didn’t care. My body wanted only one thing, to get the hell out of there. Oh my god! Oh my god![/b]

There is a lot going on in this truly great movie but I always zero in on the Saleri Syndrome. That’s when someone who has a passion for doing something bumps into someone else who does it much better and with far greater ease. It is an unbearable point of view at times. The Sean/Will narrative is just okay. As is the Will/Skylar narrative. But the Will Hunting/Professor Gerry Lambeau narrative is nothing short of gut wrenching. That and the equally turbulent exchanges between Gerry and Sean.

Well, to me anyway.

GOOD WILL HUNTING
Directed by Gus Van Zant [Written by Ben Affleck and Matt Damon]

[b]Student: Excuse me, Professor Lambeau?
Lambeau: Yes.
Student: I’m in your applied theories class. We’re all down at the Math and Science building.
Lambeau: It’s Saturday.
Student: I know. We just couldn’t wait 'till Monday to find out.
Lambeau: Find out what?
Student: Who proved the theorem.

Chuckie: So this is a Harvard bar, huh? I thought there’d be equations and shit on the wall

Chuckie: Are we gonna have a problem here?
Clark: No, no, no, no! There’s no problem here. I was just hoping you might give me some insight into the evolution of the market economy in the southern colonies. My contention is that prior to the Revolutionary War, the economic modalities, especially in the southern colonies, could be most aptly described as agrarian pre-capitalist.
Will [interjecting]: Of course that’s your contention. You’re a first-year grad student; you just got finished reading some Marxian historian, Pete Garrison probably. You’re gonna be convinced of that ‘till next month when you get to James Lemon. Then you’re going to be talking about how the economies of Virginia and Pennsylvania were entrepreneurial and capitalist way back in 1740. That’s gonna last until next year; you’re gonna be in here regurgitating Gordon Wood, talkin’ about, you know, the pre-revolutionary utopia and the capital-forming effects of military mobilization.
Clark: Well, as a matter of fact, I won’t, because Wood drastically underestimates the impact of social…
Will: “Wood drastically underestimates the impact of social distinctions predicated upon wealth, especially inherited wealth”? You got that from Vickers’ “Work in Essex County,” page 98, right? Yeah, I read that too. Were you gonna plagiarize the whole thing for us? Do you have any thoughts of your own on this matter? Or do you, is that your thing, you come into a bar, read some obscure passage and then pretend - you pawn it off as your own, as your own idea just to impress some girls, embarrass my friend?..See, the sad thing about a guy like you is, in 50 years you’re gonna start doin’ some thinkin’ on your own and you’re going to come up with the fact that there are two certainties in life: one, don’t do that, and two, you dropped 150 grand on a fuckin’ education you could have got for a dollar fifty in late charges at the public library!
Clark: Yeah, but I will have a degree. And you’ll be servin’ my kids fries at a drive-thru on our way to a skiing trip.
Will: That may be, but at least I won’t be unoriginal. But I mean, if you have a problem with that, I mean, we could just step outside - we could figure it out.
Clark: No, man, there’s no problem. It’s cool.[/b]

I love the way this particular pedant is exposed…then pummeled. What Will has to learn though is that in his own way he is really not all that much different. He just goes to the library instead of the university.

[b]Sean: Do you have a soul mate?
Will: Define that.
Sean: Someone you can relate to, someone who opens things up for you.
Will: Sure, I got plenty.
Sean: Well, name them.
Will: Shakespeare, Nietzsche, Frost, O’Conner…
Sean: Well that’s great. They’re all dead.
Will: Not to me, they’re not.
Sean: You can’t have a lot of dialogue with them.
Will: Not without a heater and some serious smelling salts.

Sean: If you ever disrespect my wife again, I will end you. I will fucking end you. You got that, chief?
Will: Time’s up

Sean: Put it on my tab
Tim: You ever plan on paying your tab?
Sean: Yeah, chief. I’ve got the winning lottery ticket right here.
Tim: What’s the jackpot?
Sean: Twelve million.
Tim: I don’t think that will cover it.

Sean: Hey, Gerry, In the 1960s there was a young man that graduated from the University of Michigan. Did some brilliant work in mathematics. Specifically bounded harmonic functions. Then he went on to Berkeley. He was assistant professor. Showed amazing potential. Then he moved to Montana, and blew the competition away.
Lambeau: Yeah, so who was he?
Sean: Ted Kaczynski.
Lambeau: Haven’t heard of him.
Sean: [yelling to the bartender] Hey, Timmy!
Timmy: Yo.
Sean: Who’s Ted Kaczynski?
Timmy: Unabomber.

Sean: Thought about what you said to me the other day, about my painting. Stayed up half the night thinking about it. Something occurred to me… fell into a deep peaceful sleep, and haven’t thought about you since. Do you know what occurred to me?
Will: No.
Sean: You’re just a kid, you don’t have the faintest idea what you’re talkin’ about.

Sean: You think I know the first thing about how hard your life has been, how you feel, who you are, because I read Oliver Twist? Does that encapsulate you? Personally… I don’t give a shit about all that, because you know what, I can’t learn anything from you, I can’t read in some fuckin’ book. Unless you want to talk about you, who you are. Then I’m fascinated. I’m in. But you don’t want to do that do you sport? You’re terrified of what you might say. Your move, chief.

Lambeau: Well, let’s see…Good…This is correct. I see you used McLauren here.
Will: Yeah, I dunno what they call it, but…
Lambeau: This can’t be right. It would be very embarrassing. Did you ever consider…
Will: I’m pretty sure it’s right.
Lambeau: But did you think of the possibility…
Will: It’s right. It’s right. Just take it home with you.

Sean: [yelling at Gerald] And why does he hang out with those retarded gorillas, as you called them? Because any one of them, if he asked them to, would take a fucking bat to your head, okay?

Lambeau: I think you could show me some appreciation.
Will: A little appreciation? Do you know how easy this is for me? Do you have any fuckin’ idea how easy this is? This is a fuckin’ joke. And I’m sorry you can’t do this. I really am because I wouldn’t have to fuckin’ sit here and watch you fumble around and fuck it up. Lambeau: Then you’d have more time to sit around and get drunk instead, wouldn’t you?
Will: You’re right. This is probably a total waste of my time.
Lambeau: You’re right, Will. I can’t do this proof. But you can, and when it comes to that it’s only about…it’s just a handful of people in the world who can tell the difference between you and me. But I’m one of them.
Will: Sorry.
Lambeau: Yeah, so am I. Most days I wish I never met you. Because then I could sleep at night, and I wouldn’t…and I wouldn’t have to walk around with the knowledge that there’s someone like you out there…And I didn’t have to watch you throw it all away.

Will: Why shouldn’t I work for the N.S.A.? That’s a tough one, but I’ll take a shot. Say I’m working at N.S.A. Somebody puts a code on my desk, something nobody else can break. Maybe I take a shot at it and maybe I break it. And I’m real happy with myself, ‘cause I did my job well. But maybe that code was the location of some rebel army in North Africa or the Middle East. Once they have that location, they bomb the village where the rebels were hiding and fifteen hundred people I never met, never had no problem with, get killed. Now the politicians are sayin’, “Oh, send in the Marines to secure the area” ‘cause they don’t give a shit. It won’t be their kid over there, gettin’ shot. Just like it wasn’t them when their number got called, ‘cause they were pullin’ a tour in the National Guard. It’ll be some kid from Southie takin’ shrapnel in the ass. And he comes back to find that the plant he used to work at got exported to the country he just got back from. And the guy who put the shrapnel in his ass got his old job, ‘cause he’ll work for fifteen cents a day and no bathroom breaks. Meanwhile, he realizes the only reason he was over there in the first place was so we could install a government that would sell us oil at a good price. And, of course, the oil companies used the skirmish over there to scare up domestic oil prices. A cute little ancillary benefit for them, but it ain’t helping my buddy at three-fifty a gallon. And they’re takin’ their sweet time bringin’ the oil back, of course, and maybe even took the liberty of hiring an alcoholic skipper who likes to drink martinis and fuckin’ play slalom with the icebergs, and it ain’t too long ‘til he hits one, spills the oil and kills all the sea life in the North Atlantic. So now my buddy’s out of work and he can’t afford to drive, so he’s got to walk to the fuckin’ job interviews, which sucks ‘cause the shrapnel in his ass is givin’ him chronic hemorrhoids. And meanwhile he’s starvin’, ‘cause every time he tries to get a bite to eat, the only blue plate special they’re servin’ is North Atlantic scrod with Quaker State. So what did I think? I’m holdin’ out for somethin’ better. I figure fuck it, while I’m at it why not just shoot my buddy, take his job, give it to his sworn enemy, hike up gas prices, bomb a village, club a baby seal, hit the hash pipe and join the National Guard? I could be elected president.

Sean: I teach this shit, I didn’t say I know how to do it.

Will: I mean, w-w-what’s wrong with layin’ brick?
Sean: Nothing.
Will: There’s nothing wrong—That’s some…that’s somebody’s home I’m building.
Sean: Right. My dad laid brick. Okay? Busted his ass so I could have an education.
Will: Exactly. That’s an honorable profession. What’s wrong with…with fixing somebody’s car. Someone can get to work the next day because of me. There’s honor in that.
Sean: Yeah, there is, Will. There is honor in that. And there’s honor in, you know, taking that forty minute train ride so those (college kids come) in the morning and the floors are clean and the wastebaskets are empty. That’s real work.
Will: That’s right.
Sean: Right. And that’s honorable. I’m sure that’s why you took that job, I mean, for the honor of it. I just have a little question here. You could be a janitor anywhere. Why did you work at the most prestigious technical college in the whole fuckin’ world? And why did you sneak around at night and finish other people’s formulas that only one or two people in the world could do, and then lie about it? Cus’ I don’t see a lot of honor in that, Will. So, what do you really want to do?

Will: What do I wanna way outta here for? I’m gonna live here the rest of my fuckin’ life. We’ll be neighbors, have little kids, take ‘em to Little League up at Foley Field.
Chuckie: Look, you’re my best friend, so don’t take this the wrong way but, in 20 years if you’re still livin’ here, comin’ over to my house, watchin’ the Patriots games, workin’ construction, I’ll fuckin’ kill ya. That’s not a threat, that’s a fact, I’ll fuckin’ kill ya.
Will: What the fuck you talkin’ about?
Chuckie: You got somethin’ none of us have…
Will: Oh, come on! What? Why is it always this? I mean, I fuckin’ owe it to myself to do this or that. What if I don’t want to?
Chuckie: No. No, no no no. Fuck you, you don’t owe it to yourself man, you owe it to me. Cuz tomorrow I’m gonna wake up and I’ll be 50, and I’ll still be doin’ this shit. And that’s all right. That’s fine. I mean, you’re sittin’ on a winnin’ lottery ticket. And you’re too much of a pussy to cash it in, and that’s bullshit. ‘Cause I’d do fuckin’ anything to have what you got. So would any of these fuckin’ guys. It’d be an insult to us if you’re still here in 20 years. Hangin’ around here is a fuckin’ waste of your time.

Chuckie: Every day I come by your house and I pick you up. And we go out. We have a few drinks, and a few laughs, and it’s great. But you know what the best part of my day is? For about ten seconds, from when I pull up to the curb and when I get to your door, 'cause I think, maybe I’ll get up there and I’ll knock on the door and you won’t be there. No goodbye. No see you later. No nothing. You just left. I don’t know much, but I know that.[/b]

The real gangsters today work on Wall Street and on K Street. They use key strokes instead of guns. So, less blood has to flow. But, really, no less pain.

The story always revolves around power. Back then, here now.

On the other hand, ambiguity abounds from beginning to end. The end in particular: Max the elder, the garbage truck…then back in time again to that enigmatic smile plastered on Noodles face over the end credits.

ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA
Directeecd by Sergio Leone

[b]Officer ‘Fartface’: Okay, boys, we’re even…
Young Noodles: The hell we are!
Young Max: You’ll be collecting your pension before we’re even!

Max: You’ll be carrying the stink of the streets with you for the rest of your life!
Noodles: I like the stink of the streets. It makes me feel good. And I like the smell of it, it opens up my lungs. And it gives me a hard-on.

Bugsy: [Bugsy and his gang have beaten Noodles and Max] You don’t work for me, you don’t work for no-one!
Young Max: I don’t like bosses.
Bugsy: You’d be better off you stayed in the Bronx.
Young Max: Woulda been better for you, too!
[Bugsy spits on him, and he and his gang walk off]
Young Max: I’m gonna kill him one of these days…
Young Noodles: Yeah? Meanwhile, it looks like he killed US!

Young Deborah: Fat, you better spray the toilet. I saw a cockroach in there.

Young Noodles: Who’re you calling a cockroach?
Young Deborah: So what are you? You’re filthy! You make me sick! You crawl up toilet walls just like a roach! So what are you?
[Noodles grabs Deborah] Young Deborah: Let go!
Young Noodles: I make you sick, huh? Then how come you showed me your tush?
Young Deborah: To a roach!

Young Deborah: Get down off of there, roach. That record’s just like Ex-Lax. Every time I put it on, you have to go to the bathroom.

Noodles: I thought you didn’t like bosses. It sounded like a good idea then. It still is.

Fat Moe: What’s this all mean?
Noodles: It means… …“Noodles, though you’ve been hiding in the asshole of the world, we found you. We know where you are.” It means…“Get ready.”
Fat Moe: For what? That’s the one thing it didn’t say.

Jimmy: You still won’t come and stop the workers or the social movement.
Chicken Joe: Listen to me, you socialist asshole! We don’t give a good fart about the socialist workers and their movements. We want you out of the factory so we can get the furnaces working again. This is the last offer you’re gonna get. You want to sign it or what?
Jimmy: Tell your bosses they can wipe their ass with it.
Chicken Joe: Fill her up.

Jimmy: Who are you? Who’s paying you?
Cockeye: I think this is gonna piss you off, Mac. I think it’s those dirty politician friends of yours.
Jimmy: Yeah? Well, you crawl back and tell 'em we don’t want you in with us. Our fight’s got nothing to do with liquor and prostitution and dope.
Max: I think you’d better get used to the idea, pal. This country is still growing up. Certain diseases it’s better to have when you’re still young.
Jimmy: You boys ain’t a mild case of the measles. You’re the plague.

Noodles [to Jimmy]: The difference is, they’ll always win. And you’ll keep getting it up the ass.

Reporter: Chief Aiello, moving policemen into the factory came as a surprise. The press, the unions, especially the strikers.
Police chief: What did you want, a declaration of war? Ours was a peaceable operation.
Reporter: Wasn’t that contrary to new union laws and the right to strike?
Police chief: I’m chief of police, not chief of people.
Reporter: Was there any violence to justify…?
Police chief: My motto is: “Prevention, not repression.”
Reporter: You let scabs move in and work.
Police chief: Young lady, you wanna talk to me, call them “unemployed workers.”

Police chief: …maybe you heard. I’m the father of a baby boy.
Reporter: We heard he’s the youngest stockholder in that factory you occupied.
Police chief: What’d you mean by that?
Reporter: They say management expressed their thanks with a present for the baby.

Sign on side of Bercovicz & Co. hearse: Why go on living when we can bury you for $49.50?

Noodles: I always thought you might have helped yourself to that million bucks. But now I know. Yeah, you’re on your ass worse than ever.
Fat Moe: But I thought it was you who…
Noodles: No, you thought wrong. The suitcase was empty.
Fat Moe: Then who took it?
Noodles: That’s what I’ve been asking myself for 35 years.

Carol: [looking at Noodles] Why don’t we make it a threesome, huh?
Max: Can’t you see he’s got other plans for tonight?
Carol: Well, bring her along! We’ll make it a foursome!
Noodles: I’m not that kind of guy. Besides, I’m afraid if I give you a good crack in the mouth, you’d probably like it…

Police chief: My son, where is he?
Noodles: Where do you think? He’s in the maternity ward. He never left. He got restless, so he wanted to change his bed. The other kids got the same idea, so they wanted to change their beds. You got screaming babies jumping from one bed to another…switching tags, so now we do have a real problem.
Police chief: Piece of shit whoever you are! What the fuck?! I want my son!

:banana-dance: :banana-dance: :banana-dance:

Patsy: You know what? You know, I wish I was switched when I was a kid.
Noodles: What makes you think you weren’t?

Noodles: I don’t know what you’re talking about. You don’t owe me a thing.
Max: Your eyes were too full of tears to see it wasn’t me burned up on that street. It was somebody else. You were too shocked to realize that the cops were in on it too. That was a syndicate operation, Noodles.

Max: I took away your whole life from you. I’ve been living in your place. I took everything. I took your money. I took your girl. All I left for you was years of grief over having killed me. Now, why don’t you shoot?

Noodles:…I have a story also. A little simpler than yours. Many years ago I had a friend, a dear friend. I turned him in to save his life…but he was killed. But he wanted it that way. It was a great friendship. It went bad for him, and it went bad for me too. Good night, Mr. Bailey.[/b]

What exactly is a reservoir dog? Well, you’ll know if you ever cross paths with one in a jewelery store. Also, the expression “dog eat dog” becomes abundantly clearer. Finally – and this is driven home with a vengence – what you think is true is all that is necessary to motivate your behavior. Rather than, say, what actually is true.

Oh, and psychopaths can be truly scary.

RESERVOIR DOGS
Written and directed by Quentin Tarantino

[b]Eddie: C’mon, throw in a buck!
Mr. Pink: Uh-uh, I don’t tip.
Eddie: You don’t tip?
Mr. Pink: Nah, I don’t believe in it.
Eddie: You don’t believe in tipping?
Mr. Blue: You know what these chicks make? They make shit.
Mr. Pink: Don’t give me that. She don’t make enough money that she can quit.
Eddie: I don’t even know a fucking Jew who’d have the balls to say that. Let me get this straight: you don’t ever tip?
Mr. Pink: I don’t tip because society says I have to. All right, if someone deserves a tip, if they really put forth an effort, I’ll give them something a little something extra. But this tipping automatically, it’s for the birds. As far as I’m concerned, they’re just doing their job.
Mr. Blue: Hey, our girl was nice.
Mr. Pink: She was okay. She wasn’t anything special.
Mr. Blue: What’s special? Take you in the back and suck your dick?

Mr Pink: I’ve known Joe since I was a kid. But me saying Joe definitely couldn’t have done it is ridiculous. I can say I definitely didn’t do it, cause I know what I did or didn’t do. But I can’t definitely say that about anybody else, 'cause I don’t definitely know. For all I know, you’re the rat.
Mr. White: For all I know, you’re the fuckin rat!
Mr Pink: Now you’re using your head.

Mr. Orange: What happens if the manager won’t give you the diamonds?
Mr. White: When you’re dealing with a store like this, they’re insured up the ass. They’re not supposed to give you any resistance whatsoever. If you get a customer, or an employee, who thinks he’s Charles Bronson, take the butt of your gun and smash their nose in. Everybody jumps. He falls down screaming, blood squirts out of his nose, nobody says fucking shit after that. You might get some bitch talk shit to you, but give her a look like you’re gonna smash her in the face next, watch her shut the fuck up. Now if it’s a manager, that’s a different story. Managers know better than to fuck around, so if you get one that’s giving you static, he probably thinks he’s a real cowboy, so you gotta break that son of a bitch in two. If you wanna know something and he won’t tell you, cut off one of his fingers. The little one. Then tell him his thumb’s next. After that he’ll tell you if he wears ladies underwear. I’m hungry. Let’s get a taco.

Marvin: That fuck! That sick fuck! That fucking bastard!
Mr. Orange: Marvin, I need you to hold on. There’s cops waiting less than a block away.
Marvin: What the fuck are they waiting for? This fucking guy slashes my face, and he cuts my fucking ear off! I’m fucking deformed!
Mr. Orange: [yells] FUCK YOU! FUCK YOU! I’M FUCKIN’ DYING HERE! I’M FUCKIN’ DYING!

Marvin: I already told you I don’t know anything about any fucking setup; you can torture me all you want.
Mr. Blonde: Torture you? That’s a good idea. I like that.

Mr. Pink: You kill anybody?
Mr. White: A few cops.
Mr. Pink: No real people?
Mr. White: Just cops.

Mr. Blonde: Listen kid, I’m not gonna bullshit you, all right? I don’t give a good fuck what you know, or don’t know, but I’m gonna torture you anyway, regardless. Not to get information. It’s amusing, to me, to torture a cop. You can say anything you want cause I’ve heard it all before. All you can do is pray for a quick death, which you ain’t gonna get. [He removes his razor]

Marvin: Please! Please… Don’t burn me, man.
Mr. Blonde: You all through? You all through?
Marvin: Look, I… I got a little kid at home. Now, PLEASE.
Mr. Blonde: [holding up a lighter] No, no, no, no, no, no. You all done? You all done? How 'bout a little fire, Mr Scarecrow?

Mr. Brown: I’m blind, man. I’m fucking blind.
Mr. Orange: You’re not blind, you’ve just got blood in your eyes.

Cop # 1: There goes our boy.
Cop #2: I swear, a guy has to have rocks in his head the size of Gibraltar to work undercover.

Joe: With the exception of Eddie and myself, whom you already know, we’re going to be using aliases on this job. Under no circumstances do I want any one of you to relate to each other by your Christian names, and I don’t want any talk about yourself personally. That includes where you been, your wife’s name, where you might’ve done time, or maybe a bank you robbed in St. Petersburg. All I want you guys to talk about, if you have to, is what you’re going to do. That should do it. Here are your names…
[pointing to each respective member]
Joe: Mr. Brown, Mr. White, Mr. Blonde, Mr. Blue, Mr. Orange, and Mr. Pink.
Mr. Pink: Why am I Mr. Pink?
Joe: Because you’re a faggot, alright?
Mr. Pink: Why can’t we pick our own colors?
Joe: No way, no way. Tried it once, doesn’t work. You got four guys all fighting over who’s gonna be Mr. Black, but they don’t know each other, so nobody wants to back down. No way. I pick. You’re Mr. Pink. Be thankful you’re not Mr. Yellow.
Mr. Brown: Yeah, but Mr. Brown is a little too close to Mr. Shit.
Mr. Pink: Mr. Pink sounds like Mr. Pussy. How 'bout if I’m Mr. Purple? That sounds good to me. I’ll be Mr. Purple.
Joe: You’re not Mr. Purple. Some guy on some other job is Mr. Purple. Your Mr. PINK.
Mr. White: Who cares what your name is?
Mr. Pink: Yeah, that’s easy for your to say, you’re Mr. White. You have a cool-sounding name. Alright look, if it’s no big deal to be Mr. Pink, you wanna trade?
Joe: Hey! nobody’s trading with anybody. This ain’t a goddamn, fucking city council meeting!

Eddie: Let me say this out loud, ‘cause I wanna get it straight in my head. You’re saying that Mr. Blonde was gonna kill you, then when we got back, he was going kill us, take the satchel of diamonds, and scram. I’m right about that, right? That’s correct? That’s your story?
Mr. Orange: I swear on my mother’s eternal soul that’s what happened.
Eddie: The man you just killed was just released from prison. He got caught at a company warehouse full of hot items. He could’ve fuckin’ walked. All he had to do was say my dad’s name, but he didn’t; he kept his fucking mouth shut. And did his fuckin’ time, and he did it like a man. He did four years for us. So, Mr. Orange, you’re tellin’ me this very good friend of mine, who did four years for my father, who in four years never made a deal, no matter what they dangled in front of him, you’re telling me that now, that now this man is free, and we’re making good on our commitment to him, he’s just gonna decide, out of the fucking blue, to rip us off? Why don’t you tell me what really happened?
Joe: [walks in] What the hell for? It’d just be more bullshit.

Mr. White: How do you know all this?
Joe: He was the only one I wasn’t 100% on. I should have my fuckin’ head examined, going on a plan like this when I wasn’t 100%.
Mr. White: [shouting] That’s your fucking proof?!

[Joe pulls out his gun and aims it at Mr. Orange]
[In response, Mr. White pulls out his gun and aims it Joe]
[Eddie pulls out his gun and aims it at Mr. White]
Eddie: Have you lost your fuckin’ mind?
Mr. White: Joe, you’re making a terrible mistake. I’m not gonna let you make it.
Mr. Pink: Come on, guys! Nobody wants this! We’re supposed to be fucking professionals!
Eddie: Larry, look. It’s been quite a long time. A lot of jobs. There’s no need for this, man. Lets just put our guns down, and lets settle this with a fuckin’ conversation.
Mr. White: Joe, if you kill that man, you die next. I repeat: If you kill that man, you die next.
Eddie: Larry, we have been friends, and you respect my dad, and I respect you, but I will put fucking bullets right through your heart. You put that fuckin’ gun down, now.
Mr. White: Goddamn you, Joe. Don’t make me do this.
Eddie: [angrily] LARRY, STOP POINTING THAT FUCKIN’ GUN AT MY DAD!

Mr. White: Sorry, kid. Looks like we’re gonna do a little time.
Mr Orange: I’m a cop…I’m sorry, I’m so sorry.[/b]

How many thousands of people view their lives in this way? They are “stuck” or “trapped” in situations beyond their control. They want to burst loose but feel obligated to stay. Is it a moral commitment…an emotional tie that binds? Or maybe both? Meanwhile their lives are just passing them by.

The film does rings false in the end though [for me] because [conveniently] the biggest hurdle of them all…dies. When Gilbert tells Arnie, “we can go anywhere”, that’s only becasue now they can.

WHAT’S EATING GILBERT GRAPE
Directed by Lasse Hallström

[b]Gilbert [narrating]: Watching the campers is our yearly ritual. They’re doing the right thing…just passing through.

Gilbert [narrating]: Endora’s where we live. Describing Endora is like dancing to no music. It’s a town where nothing much ever happens…and nothing much ever will. Lamson’s Grocery is where I work. And miles out of town on the interstate, there’s Foodland…where everyone else shops.

Gilbert [narrating]: Doctors said we’d be lucky if Arnie lived to be ten. Well, ten came and went. Now the doctors are saying… “Any time now. Arnie can go at any time.” Some days you want him to live… some days you don’t.

Tucker: How’s momma?
Gilbert: She’s fat.
Tucker: Come on, man. She’s not all that big, Gilbert.
Gilbert: What?
Tucker: Listen, I saw a guy at the state fair who was… a little bit bigger.
Gilbert: A little bit bigger?
Tucker: Look, all I’m sayin’ is that she’s not the biggest I ever seen, okay?
Gilbert: Tucker, she’s a whale!
Tucker: Well, take her out for a walk once in a while.
Gilbert: Take her out for a jog!
Arnie: She’s a whale! Tucker, she’s a whale!

Becky: I love the sky. It’s so limitless.
Gilbert: It is big. It’s very big.
Becky: Big doesn’t even sum it up, right? The word big is too small.

Gilbert: It’s not going to happen again. This is the last time. Right Arnie?
Arnie: It’s the last time.
Gilbert: Okay. Let’s go.
Arnie: But I want to go back up there again.

Arnie: I could go at any time.

Gilbert: You don’t hurt Arnie, you just don’t.

Arnie: Dad’s dead! Dad’s dead! Dad’s dead! Dad’s dead! Dad’s dead! Dad’s dead!

Gilbert: We don’t really move. I mean, we’d like to, but…my mom is sort of attached to the house. Attached is, I guess, not the right word. She’s pretty much wedged in.

Mr. Lamson: What’s going on over there at “Food Land”?
Gilbert: [labeling price tags on cans] I wouldn’t know, I don’t shop there. [puts a can up and looks at boss] I’d rather die.

Gilbert: Did you ever see a beached whale on television?
Becky: Yeah.
Gilbert: Yeah. That’s her. That’s my mom.
Becky: What about your dad?
Gilbert: Uh, some other day. Some other day.

Betty: Hey. I could have had any guy, any guy, but I chose you. I chose you.
Gilbert: Why did you?
Betty: Because…I knew you’d always be there. Because I knew you’d never leave

Gilbert: Nobody knew what he felt. He didn’t give anything. He was just sort of there. You’d try to play with him, you know, get him to play around… or get him to laugh or get him to smile or get him to… I don’t know… get mad. But nothin’. Just like, uh, he was already dead.

Gilbert: l-It’s gonna take a crane to get her out.
Ellen: There’s gonna be a crowd. I just know there’s gonna be a crowd.

Amy: She’s so beautiful
Gilbert: I’m not going to let it be a joke.[/b]

The stuff in this movie really happened. Yeah, they cheated. On the other hand…

Cheating ought to be a synonym for capitalism in the dictionary. And the film more or less touts this as its subtext. Cheating in a world where the odds are stacked against millions just for being born on the wrong side of the tracks is not necessarily wrong in my view. Here the moral narrative is likely to revolve around dasein. In some contexts I believe it is reasonable to rationalize it.

And it is telling that in order to prove the kids cheated those investigating them resorted to cheating themselves: they lied to them. To each of them they claimed all the others had “confessed” and named him/her as the “ringleader”.

CHEATERS
Written and directed by John Stockwell

[b]Jerry: What did Dante say was written on the gates of Lucifer’s “shop”.
Jolie: "Abandon all hope ye who enter here.”
Student: That’s what it should say on the door to this school.

Irwin Flickas: It was a multiple choice test. Nobody told me you could only pick one answer!

Jerry: Benjamin Franklin said: “The only way 3 people can keep a secret is if 2 of them are dead”. Let’s see if we can prove him wrong.[/b]

They didn’t

[b]Jolie: This isn’t about cheating, it’s about winning. And as we all know winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing

Jolie: If you’re going to cheat, cheat smart.

Jerry: You wanna know why you should do this?
Paul: Course we’re gonna embarrass ourselves in front of the entire city?
Jerry: Because no one thinks you can. Because you don’t think you can.
Paul: Sir, we know we can’t.

Jolie: Dr. Plecki is amazing. He’s a really good teacher.
Darius: Well, what’s he doing here then?

Darius: Well, if we could get the tests, I’m sure Whitney Young has them too.
Jolie: Of course they do. Doesn’t the decathlon have their offices at Whitney Young? I mean, you do the math.
Dominik: So, two wrongs would make a right?
Darius: No. Two wrongs make it even.

Jerry: Why don’t you investigate, you know, Young’s scores from the past nine years? You won’t, because you’re in bed with them.
Joan: Are you questioning my integrity?
Jerry: I don’t need to question your integrity. I call your office, the phone rings at Whitney Young

Jolie: Why did Adam and Eve get in trouble in the first place?
Student: They ate the apple, baby.
Jolie: They ate from the tree of knowledge. They just wanted knowledge.
Jerry: God was testing them.
Jolie: But He didn’t tell them why. He was just, “I’m in charge here. Do what I say.” He said, “you can eat from any tree, just don’t eat from this one.” So, of course, what are they going to do? It’s human nature.

Jerry: Guys, this is crunch time. Nothing is supposed to get in the way of your studying. If you have to stay here all night, then…
Darius: Wait a second, Dr. Plecki, I don’t know what world you’re living in…I appreciate your optimism but the fact of this is no matter how hard we study and work for this Young is going to take this thing for the tenth year in a row. So if Dominik wants to keep his job and Agnieska wants to make sure her sister gets fed tonight instead of studying cytoplasmic binding proteins all day, that’s just…[long pause] Look, I love the dream you gave us. No, I really do. But there’s a certain point where you just have to wake up and realize, you know, it’s just a fuckin’ dream. It’s just a dream.

Jerry: Why don’t you go upstairs and tell those kids if they want to be in a basketball tournament, we’ll throw money at ‘em, but if they wanna be in an academic tournament, they are on their own.

Basketball coach: Jerry, what’s your record?
Jerry: My record?
Basketball coach: Yeah. You 0 and 4, 0 and 6? We’re 11 and 0.
Jerry: Congratu-fucking-lations.
Basketball coach: Yeah, well that’s why I get to use the machine.

Jerry: I’m a teacher so I’m supposed to spout the same platitudes you’ve heard a million times before: “Cheaters don’t prosper.” “It’s not whether you win or lose, it’s how you play the game.” Well, this may not be approved curriculum, but guess what. Winning does matter. Cheaters do prosper. I used to run a business importing Irish crystal and let me tell you what happens when you don’t pay off the right people or inflate sales claims or be creative with your accounting. You don’t stay in business very long. Try telling the truth on your loan application, you won’t get one. This is a results oriented world. Do you think Bill Gates fired the guys who brought him the Apple operating system code? He probably promoted them. Do you think he would ever send his kids to a Chicago public school?..They call Witney Young a public school. Uses public money. But what it is is a private school. These kids get the best education our tax dollars can buy. You get to go to school here if your parents know how to work the system. Maybe they don’t even live in the city limits so they keep a mail drop in Bucktown or they lie about their address…their income…their ethnicity.

Mother: How could you do this? How could you betray those kids?
Jerry: It’s not that simple, Mother.
Mother: Yes, it is. It’s that simple. Teachers don’t teach kids how to cheat.
Jerry: Believe me, those kids didn’t need any instruction.
Mother: Yes! Yes they did. They needed someone to tell them that it was wrong…Your father was so proud when you became a teacher. He never cared how much money you made…He lived a decent honest life.
Jerry: Yeah, and look what happened to him. He got screwed. He had this bullshit immigrant notion that if he worked hard enough and wanted something bad enough, all his dreams would come true!
Mother: No! All your dreams would come true. That’s why he worked so hard in that factory…inhaling those diesel fumes so you wouldn’t have to.
Jerry: The minute he got sick, they laid him off! They took his pension, they took his medical insurance! They killed him! They fucking killed him! That was his reward! That was the reward he got for all his hard work!

Jerry: Obviously, we made some mistakes.
Jolie: Getting caught for one.
Jerry: No, no, no. This isn’t about getting caught or being punished. I look at what we did as a kind of civil disobedience. Or maybe that was a mistake. Maybe I owe you an apology. I don’t know anything anymore. I just know that sometimes you need to break the rules in order to change them. And things will change because of this.
Paul: They’ll make the tests harder to steal.
Jerry: Yeah, probably…But they’ll also have to justify holding a competition that isn’t a real competition where the same yeam wins year after year. They’ll have to justify warehousing you while a chosen few get a quality education.[/b]

Of course those in power have always been particularly adept at rationalizing what they do not do for the poor and the working class.

Jolie [narrating]: People always ask me, “Having gone through everything you went through would you do it again?” And I always give the same answer. “In a heartbeat.” I learned more about the way the world really works from my nine months on the decathlon than most people will learn in a lifetime.

There are people able to cram very strange things into their heads. Watch out for them. If nothing else they might succeed in exposing all the strange shit you have crammed into your own.

Based [loosely, I suspect] on actual events.

THE NIGHT LISTENER
Directed by Patrick Stettner

[b]Gabe: What?
Jess: I think it’s the same voice.
Gabe: What?
Jess: Yeah. Pete and Donna. I…I don’t know. They have the same voice. One is just higher pitched, but they’re…
Gabe: What are you saying it’s some kind of impersonation?
Jess: Yeah, more or less.
Gabe: Why would someone do that?
Jess: I don’t know.
Gabe: Look, there are dozens of people who know them.
Jess: Who?
Gabe: Doctors. There’s a nurse who comes and stays at the house.
Jess: You’ve only been told that.
Gabe: What about Ashe?
Jess: Did he actually go to Wisconsin?
Gabe: He must have. What about the photo?
Jess: That could have be anybody.
Gabe: There are ways to prove this.
Jess: Hey, I’m happy to be wrong.

Gabe: Did she ever show you a birth certificate, an adoption document, something substanitial?
Ashe: If you think it’s a hoax, you’re off base.
Gabe: Why?
Ashe: Because!..Because I spent over a year speaking with them and they told me things you couldn’t imagine.

Gabe: Why would someone do this? That’s what I keep asking. It’s a hideous way to promote a book.
Anna: Maybe it’s not about that for her. Maybe she doesn’t even know she is doing it. Like a multiple-personality thing…Wait, what if she had a kid who died in some, like, horrible way and now she needs to assume his identity in order to…
Gabe: No…
Anna: What if she has him embalmed? You know, like that guy from Psycho?..No, wait. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. What if she’s the one who doesn’t exist? What if he is impersonating her?

Gabe: What if there is some half-dead kid and I’ve just taken away his last shred of hope? I couldn’t live with that.
Anna: Ever thought of a voiceprint? Like what the cops use. They’re as good as fingerprints.
Gabe: Now you’re scaring me.

Donna: You know, I thought you’d be different. I thought you’d be able to look into his soul with his complexities and contradictions and see him as your own flesh and blood the way I do.
Gabe: That is how I see him.
Donna: I don’t think so. You wouldn’t have distrusted us.
Gabe: I spent the last two days stumbling around this fucked-up place so that I can say…
Donna: Just so you could say what? That you were sorry for thinking him a fraud? Give me a fuckin’ break.

Gabe: They know everything. They’re calling all the hospitals. They don’t like being lied to.
Donna [gasping]: I’m not lying!
Gabe [more to himself]: Jesus, why did I come here?!
Donna: You know why? Because you thought this would make a great fucking story. You’ll talk about me an Pete on the radio. That’s what this has always been about. All you care about is your audience loving you…For years Jess was dying and you picked over him like a vulture. You’re so pathetic, you actually think he is going to come back to you!

Donna [to Gabe over the phone]: Your story doesn’t have an ending, Gabriel. I’m at the Hudson Plaza Motel at JFK. Room 142. I left something for you.[/b]

If I could be one again, I would.

DRUGSTORE COWBOY
Written and directed by Gus Van Sant

[b]Bob: Upon entering my vein the drug would start a warm edge…Until the brain consumed it…I felt such pleasure that the whole world sympathized…It was grand then…Your worst enemy wasn’t so bad…The ants in the grass were just doing their thing…Everything took on a rosy hue of unlimited success…You could do no wrong…And as long as it lasted life was beautiful.

Rick: Jesus, Bob, you never told us anything about not mentioning dogs.
Bob: The reason nobody mentioned dogs, Rick, is that to mention the dog would have been a hex in itself.
Rick: All right, well, now we are on the subject, are there an other stupid things we aren’t supposed to mention that will affect our future?

Bob: We played a game you couldn’t win… to the utmost.

Bob: Diane was my wife. I loved her, and she loved dope. So we made a good couple.

Bob: I tell ya, no construction stiff working overtime endured more stress and strain than we did just trying to stay high.

Bob: All these kids, they’re all TV babies. Watching people killing and fucking each other on the boob tube for so long it’s all they know. Hell, they think it’s legal. They think it’s the right thing to do

Bob: A sheriff’s convention no less! Why couldn’t it have been a Tupperware convention?
Diane: Better yet an undertakers.

Bob: Well, to begin with, nobody, and I mean nobody, can talk a junkie out of using. You can talk to 'em for years but sooner or later they’re gonna get ahold of something. Maybe it’s not dope. Maybe it’s booze, maybe it’s glue, maybe it’s gasoline. Maybe it’s a gunshot to the head. But something. Something to relieve the pressures of their everyday life, like having to tie their shoes.

Drug Counselor: Have you ever been convicted of a felony?
Bob: Yeah, a few times.
Drug Counselor: What were they? What felonies were you convicted of?
Bob: [pauses] What do you want? You want my life story?
[Gets up]
Bob: I’m a junkie, I like drugs, I like the whole lifestyle. But it just didn’t pay off. You know, you don’t see my kind of people. Because my kind of people don’t beg dope, they go out and get it.

Bob: [about Tom] I bet he shot a million dollars in his arm.

Tom the Priest: Narcotics have been systematically scapegoated and demonized. The idea that someone can use drugs to escape a horrible fate is anathema to these idiots.

Gentry: Bob, tell me, who shot you
Bob: The hat.
Gentry: The hat?
Bob: Tell Diane to look out for the hat. Tell her, okay?
Gentry: Okay. It was the hat who shot you, right Bob?
Bob: No. The TV baby shot me.
Gentry: The TV baby shot you but the hat was with him, right? Tell me who the hat is Bob, so I can tell Diane.
Bob: Never mind, I’ll tell her myself.

Bob: It’s this fucking life. You never know what’s gonna happen next. That’s why Nadine spiked herself. It was the easy way out. That’s why Diane keeps going on the way she does. Most people don’t know how they’re gonna feel from one moment to the next. But a dope fiend has a pretty good idea. All you gotta do is look at the labels on the little bottles.[/b]

Young, hip, middle-class singles in grungy Seattle. What could possibly go wrong?
Oh, and they’re all white and beautiful.

SINGLES
Written and Directed by Cameron Crowe

[b]Salesman: This is the Genie Classic. You can’t go wrong with this garage door opener. Here’s the Liftrex series. We have the Liftrex and the Liftrex Super. Might be more opener than you need. And of course the Linear pocket-pager-beeper-garage-door-opener combo.
Linda: Just give me the best one you have. I’ll never lose it again.

Janet: Are my breasts too small for you?
Cliff: Sometimes.

Janet: Somewhere around 25, bizarre becomes immature.

Steve: I just happened to be nowhere near your neighborhood.

Debbie: Hey, guys, I’m gonna use that video date you got me last Christmas.
Bailey: It was a joke.

Andy: You know, it’s okay to loathe these people.

Young Steve: The man keeps moving until something squirts out of his penis.
Friend: What? What squirts out?
Young Steve: Spam!

Cliff: Look, Janet you know I see other people still. You do know that don’t you?
Janet: You don’t fool me.
Cliff: Janet, I could not be fooling you less

Steve: My friend and I have a long-running argument. He says that when you come to a place like this you can’t just be yourself you have to have an act. So, anyway, I saw you standing there so I thought: a] I could just leave you alone b] that I could come up with an act or c] I could just be myself. I chose c. What do you think?
Linda: I think that, a) you have an act, and that, b) not having an act is your act.

Janet: So I’m not an Amazon woman?
Steve: You’re from the high plains, Janet.

Cliff: That’s a very nice hat you’re wearing…and I don’t mean that in an Eddie Haskell kind of way.

Club Interviewer: Talking here with Cliff Poncier. Cliff, any comments on the “Seattle Sound” and Citizen Dick’s place in it?
Cliff: Well, I don’t like to reduce us to just being part of the “Seattle Sound.” I’d like to think of us as expanding more. Like, we’re huge in Europe right now. I mean, we’ve got records… uh, a big record just broke in Belgium.
Club Interviewer: Now, a song like “Touch Me, I’m Dick” is about…what?
Cliff: Well, I think “Touch Me, I’m Dick,” in essence, speaks for itself, you know. I think that, you know, that’s basically what the song is, um…about…is about, you know… I-I think a lot of people might think it’s actually about, you know,“My name is Dick, and, you know, you can touch me,” but, I think, you know, it can be seen either way.

The Mime: Let me tell you about love. Love disappears, baby!

Steve: I broke up with someone recently: Jennifer, my last girlfriend. I did it in a crowded restaurant. She just stared at me with that look: How can you pass me up? I told her we weren’t right and all the stuff we both knew. A week later I realized I was wrong, tried to get back together with her. She won’t see me. Now she’s with Tony. Tony knows my friend Bailey, who’s friends with the girl Tony’s going out with on the side, Rita. Rita who I broke up with to go out with Jennifer. So now do I tell Jennifer that I know Tony’s going out with Rita or do I tell Rita that I know about Tony and Jennifer? Tony will tell Jennifer that I was still going out with Rita while I was going out with her. How does stuff get so complicated? I don’t know.

Woman at clinic: Have you had breast implants before?
Janet: What do you think?
Woman at clinic [glancing down at her chest]: Uh, no.

Debbie: This is so unfair.
Pam: Okay, how much do you want for him?
Debbie: $200.
Pam: Outrageous!
Debbie: That’s what I paid.
Pam: $75.
Debbie: $150.
Pam: $80 and I’ll do the dishes all month.
Debbie: Deal!

Cliff: Tomorrow I got to sneak back in there and spell her name in rose petals.

Steve: Do you realize Janet that in modern day society there is almost no need to leave the house. At all.

Steve: What took you so long?[/b]

There is nothing, absolutely nothing, someone can’t figure out a way to make a buck on. Tragedy being the least of them at times. But someone should pay, right? There has to be a culprit. But how do we sort out our obligations when it is something this entangled?

Was it all just a patch of ice being in the wrong place at the wrong time? What if no one is to blame? Or was it more sinister. Or cynical.

Sometimes Mitchell seems to be the hero here, sometimes Billy seems to be. And by the time it gets down to us the experience may become reduced to…entertainment?

THE SWEET HEREAFTER
Written and directed by Atom Egoyan

[b]Mason: Nicole, did the Pied Piper take the children away because he was mad that the town didn’t pay him?
Nicole: That’s right.
Mason: Well, if he knew magic, if he could get the kids into the mountain, why couldn’t he use his magic pipe to make the people pay him for getting rid of the rats?
Nicole: Because… he wanted them to be punished.
Mason: So he was mean?
Nicole: No, not mean, just… very angry.

Zoe: (over the phone) So what’s the problem?
Mitchell: The problem is I have no idea who I’m talking to right now.

Mitchell: Tell me about the Ottos.
Risa: Wanda and Hartley. They lost Bear. He was their adopted son. A beautiful boy. Indian. Mitchell: Indian?
Risa: Yes.
Mitchell: That’s good. Judges like adopted Indian boys.

Mitchell: It should be said that my task is to represent the Walkers only in their anger. Not their grief.
Wanda: Who did they get for that?
Mitchell: You are angry, aren’t you, Mrs. Otto? That’s why I’m here. To give your anger a voice. To be your weapon against whoever caused that bus to go off the road.

Mitchell: Mrs. Otto, there is no such thing as an accident. The word doesn’t mean anything to me. As far as I’m concerned, somebody somewhere made a decision to cut a corner. Some corrupt agency or corporation accounted the cost variance between a ten-cent bolt and a million dollar out-of-court settlement. They decided to sacrifice a few lives for the difference. That’s what’s done, Mrs. Otto. I’ve seen it happen so many times before.

Mitchell: Listen to me, Mrs Otto. Listen very carefully. I do know what’s best. As we’re sitting here the town or the school board or the manufacturer of that bus are lining up a battery of their own lawyers to negotiate with people as grief-stricken as yourselves. And this makes me very, very mad. It’s why I came all the way up here. If everyone had done their job with integrity your son would be alive this morning and safely in school. I promise you that I will pursue and reveal who it was that did not do their job.

Mitchell: …I’ve sent her to the best hospitals, she’s seen all the best doctors. It doesn’t matter. Two weeks later she’s on the street. New York, Vancouver, Pittsburgh, Toronto, L.A. The next time I hear from her, it’s a phone call scamming for money. Money for school, or money for a new kind of therapist, or money for a plane ticket home. ‘Oh Daddy, just let me come home…Please, Daddy, I have to see you…’ But she never comes home. I’m always at the airport, but she’s never there. Ten years of this, ten years of these lies, of imagining what happens if I don’t send the money, of kicking down doors and dragging her out of rat-infested apartments, of explaining why that couldn’t be my daughter in a porn flick someone saw…well, enough rage and helplessness, and your love turns to something else.
Alison: (softly): What…does it turn to?
Mitchell: It turns to steaming piss.

Risa: Is it true that you gave Nicole one of Lydia’s dresses? That she was wearing it when the bus crashed?
Billy: Yes.
Risa: Why did you do that, Billy?
Billy: You think that caused the accident, Risa? That it brought bad luck? Christ, it sounds to me you’re looking for a witch doctor, not a lawyer. Or maybe they’re the same thing.

Billy: There’s lawyers suing lawyers because some people were stupid enough to sign on with more thasn one if the bastards. There’s people pointing fingers and making side deals…dickering over percentages.

Mitchell: I can help you.
Billy: Not unless you can raise the dead.

Billy: Mitchell Stephens, Esquire. Tell me, would you be likely to sue me if I was to beat you right now? I mean, beat you so bad you piss blood and couldn’t walk for a month. Because that’s what I’m about to do.
Mitchell: No, Mr. Ansel. I wouldn’t sue you.
Billy: You leave us alone, Stephens. You leave the people of this town alone.

Mitchell: That’s my daughter. Or it may be the police to tell me that they’ve found her dead. She’s a drug addict.
Billy: Why are you telling me this?
Mitchell: I’m telling you this because… we’ve all lost our children, Mr. Ansel. They’re dead to us. They kill each other in the streets. They wander comatose in shopping malls. They’re paralyzed in front of televisions. Something terrible has happened that’s taken our children away. It’s too late. They’re gone.

Sam: Nicole, tomorrow Mr. Stephens wants you to make your deposition at the community center. Thought I’d take you over.
Nicole: Great.
Sam: You seem, uh, I don’t know. Distant, I guess. Hard to talk to.
Nicole: We didn’t used to have to talk a lot, did we Daddy?

Mitchell: She loved us both equally then…just as she hates us both equally now.

Mitchell: You’d make a good poker player, kid

Sam: I don’t know what she was doing in there. She was lying.
Mitchell: It doesn’t matter whether she was lying or not. The lawsuit is dead. Everyone’s lawsuit is dead. Forget it. Tell the others to forget it. It is over. Right now, the thing you got to worry about is why she lied. Now, any kid who would do that to her father is not normal.[/b]

Did Nicole lie? And, if so, why? If a lie, was it the right thing or the wrong thing to do?

Nicole: I wonder if you realize that all of us - Dolores, me, the children who survived, the children who didn’t - that we’re all citizens of a different town now. A town with different rules and different laws. A town of people living in the sweet hereafter.

The hereafter, yes. Sweet? I still don’t get that part.

Looks. Some got 'em, some don’t.

But what happens when you got 'em and then in the blink of an eye you don’t? Or if you’re not sure whether you got 'em or not?
Or if you’re not even sure if whether you got 'em or not is real is just a dream?

Looks and everything else for that matter.

OPEN YOUR EYES [Abre los ojos] 1997

Written and directed by Alejandro Amenábar

[b]Doctor: Do you believe in God?
Cesar: Don’t start all that shit.
Doctor: I just asked a question. If you don’t want to, don’t answer.
Cesar: I don’t believe in God.
Doctor: How do you explain what happened?
Cesar: How do you mean?
Doctor: Your face.
Cesar: There is no explanation.

Sofia: I’m an actor.
Cesar: Actors aren’t honest. They’re able to show emotions they don’t really have or which, at most, they invent.

Sofia: It would be wrong if we did anything tonight.
Ceasr: Why?
Sofia: Pelayo. Remember? Your best friend.
Ceasr: He doesn’t have to find out. Besides, he’d do the same.
Sofia: I see friendship really matters to you.
Cesar: It does. That’s why I wouldn’t tell him.

Nuria: Cesar…do you believe in God?

Cesar: Let’s look at this. I’m not an idiot. Today, people change their breasts. They have hair transplants. They even change the color of their skin. Are you saying…you can’t do a simple operation and sort out this fuck-up?..I’m not just any patient. And this isn’t a welfare hospital. I’m willing to pay any amount!..Invent something! Experiment on me!

Cesar: Everytime I look in the mirror I want to die.
Doctor: Your case isn’t so serious. Just learn to accept it.
Cesar: And who will accept me? Will you explain to the people who look at me in the street? Will you tell them that looks aren’t important? That beauty is on the inside?

Sofia: They were to remove the plates today.
Cesar: And they did.
Sofia: And?
Cesar: Well, my ears are where they should be.

Doctor: You thought you were at home, but you suddenly realize you’re in a school. Or a hospital. Or a prison. Dreams are like that. And at times the mind behaves as if it were in a dream. You know what derangement is?
Cesar: For fuck’s sake! Say I’m stupid if you want, but this isn’t derangement!
Doctor: Then what is it? You tell me, because I don’t know. I don’t know what’s in here [tapping himself on the forehead] or why you killed your girlfriend. I don’t know who Eli is, or that man from the TV. I don’t know anything.
Cesar: That makes two of us.

Cesar: It’s a dream! It’s a dream! It’s a dream![/b]

How superficial is the depth of the arguments posed here? Art, religion, nudity, sex, blasphemy and the class struggle in a teeny tiny corner of the world.

SIRENS
Written and directed by John Duigan

[b]Norman: [reading from newspaper] The repetitious excesses of Norman Lindsay have long been a source of consternation to clean-living citizens of this country. For many years he has painted men and women who seem to be slaves of cocaine or a similar drug which has reduced them to frenzied and shameless morbidity. Today, however, not content with scorning all standards of public decency, he has chosen to profane the most sacred image of the Christian church, the Crucifixion.

Sheela: [talking about an outhouse] I should have warned him about the redbacks.
Estella: What are they?
Sheela: Small spiders with big teeth. They live under toilet seats usually.
Estella: How do you know if they’re there?
Sheela: By the screams

Anthony: I don’t think there’s anything sinful about the body. There’s a tradition of religious painting featuring the nude. lt’s a question of…how the artist uses the body that’s important.
Giddy: So, do you think Mr Lindsay’s paintings are crude?
Anthony: Some l think are profane.
Giddy: Oh, that’s good!

Anthony: So you’re a genuine believer in Atlantis?
Norman: Well, l lived there in a former incarnation.
Anthony: l ask because the cataclysm can be seen as an image of moral collapse and some think we’re going through a similar period of decay. Do you explore that in your painting?
Norman: l think people have always been decaying…whenever they can.

Pru: lmaginations are a luxury…Most people can’t afford them.
Anthony: l don’t think imagination is dependent on economics, is it?
Pru: ln a factory you’re doing exactly the same thing day after day.
Estella: An active imagination is what allows people to do that kind of work.
Pru: Oh, well, you’d know, of course!
Estella: l just think that’s what you’d have to do. You’d have to be imagining other things.
Pru: Please don’t tell us what the working class does and doesn’t think, thank you very much.

Estella: Did you get anywhere with Mr Lindsay?
Anthony: He insists it’s up to the public to decide for themselves if they want to see his pictures. Of course, they have to see them first to decide, by which time the damage has been done, but that is a bit of logic which is lost upon him.

Norman: When l was a boy, my mother used to try to instruct us on the sad story of Jesus, how He died on the cross for us. My whole being rose in revolt against the idea! lt’s a vile notion that a god should sacrifice himself for the sins of mankind, it’s a pestilent notion.
Anthony: Well, l couldn’t agree with that.
Norman: As for the suffering my poor pictures will cause a few people, it’s nothing compared to the suffering the Church has caused. The burning of witches, the Spanish lnquisition, the slaughter of pagan tribes and so on.

Anthony: l suppose there’s no point in trying to prevail on you to help persuade Norman just to withdraw that particular picture?
Rose: Mr Campion, have you actually seen it?
Anthony: Yes, very briefly in the gallery.
Rose: l was the model for it, you see…
Anthony: Ah.

Norman: lf God didn’t want us to play with these parts, why did He make them so much fun?

Norman: The fact is, the gloomy God of the Old Testament still has us by the scruff of the neck today. When He was invented, there were a lot of pagan religions that celebrated sexuality and fertility and so on. So how is this new religion to compete with something so popular? By saying that sex was evil and that women, the embodiment of sexuality, were responsible for the downfall of mankind in the Garden of Eden!

Estella: They’re trying to shock us, aren’t they?
Anthony: Well, church-baiting’s always been a popular pastime. l got an awful lot of it at university. The atheists always think it’s funny to roast the dusty old Christian. The great thing, of course, is not to be too dusty. You should have seen Lindsay’s face when l started quoting Joyce at him.

Estella: You’re very contemptuous of shrinking violets.
Norman: Dear Estella, l’m a shrinking violet myself. l choose to live not in the real world but in my head. l flee from the real world into my little studio and there before me is the unlimited canvas of my imagination.
Anthony: But your paintings, they do go out into the real world. While you have a wonderful imagination, most are stunted and you have no idea what effect they’ll have on people or what they might incite them to. Rape?
Norman: Mr Campion, in my opinion, the female body is the most beautiful thing in the world and if it turns you into a ravenous maniac l’d suggest it’s a good idea if your wife takes the greatest care to get undressed behind a screen.
Rose: Estella’s seen the pictures too. Does that mean we in danger from her?

Pru: You’re so patronizing, Mr Campion. Everyone has a rich imagination. What stunts it is capitalist exploitation. Go to Soviet Russia where they’ve been liberated, there’s an explosion of creativity.
Anthony: Have you been to Soviet Russia, Pru? Have you? I’m sorry, l thought for a moment someone knew what they were talking about instead of banging on in this tired bohemian way. The only thing Communism has exploded is every value, religious or otherwise, leaving a vacuum of moral anarchy.
Pru: Anarchy is freedom!
Anthony: Balls! Sorry. Sorry. Freedom for the strong to dominate the weak. lt’s exactly as before, just a different set of bullies.[/b]

Corruption in government. Corruption in the church. Corruption in the legal system. Corruption in the human spirit. And we are left to draw our own lines between the Hollywood version and the one we know about “in reality”.

PRIMAL FEAR
Directed by Gregory Hoblit

[b]Marty: On my first day of law school, my professor says two things. First was; “From this day forward, when your mother tells you she loves you - get a second opinion.”
Reporter: [chuckles] And?
Marty: “If you want justice, go to a whorehouse. If you wanna get fucked, go to court.”

Reporter: Where were you with the truth?
Marty: Truth? How do you mean?
Reporter: I’m not sure how many ways there are to mean it.
Marty: You think there’s only one? There’s only one that matters. My version of it. The one I create in the minds of the twelve jurors. If you want, you can call it something else like the illusion of truth.

Janet: Oh, Marty. Don’t tell me you think he didn’t do it. Has little Aaron Stampler gotten to you?

Marty: Yeah, I’m Martin Vail, from the public defender’s office. I’m handling the Aaron Stampler case.
Cop: Hmm, The Butcher Boy.
Marty: Yes, thank you, I forgot his real name

Marty: We saw each other for six months.
Janet: It was a one-night stand, Marty. It just lasted six months.

Alderman: Most people assume this land we’re walking on belongs to the railroad. But it doesn’t. It belongs to the Church.
Mary: The Church? So that’s the Rushman Foundation.
Alderman: That’s right. With a bunch of rich developers.
Marty: Including John Shaughnessy.
Alderman: Oh yeah. Then they got greedy. They bought up land and buildings around the Church property and tore them down. Our neighbourhood would disappear. I went to the Archbishop and said, “What are you doing to these people?” “They’re poor. They’re getting kicked out of their homes.” - “And they’re Catholic.”
Joey: Fucking A.
Alderman: He listened. I couldn’t believe it. He told them to stop developing around the Church property.
Marty: The partners hold buildings they can’t demolish and land they can’t build on. Shaughnessy loses millions.

Shaughnessy: This city doesn’t burn because I won’t permit it. I’m the great negotiator. You think people get that? The truth is I don’t care. The dumb bastards don’t even vote. They just eat, sleep, watch TV and occasionally fuck their wives.
Marty: Guess we should all thank you.
Shaughnessy: You’re welcome.
Marty: John, you need some new material. I’ve heard this great-city speech ten times already.

Shaughnessy: Your assistant’s been digging around in the Archbishop’s finances.
Marty: Yeah, well. How much did you lose when he pulled the plug from South River?
Shaughnessy: Let me tell you something. It’s a mistake to stick your thumb in the eyes of the city’s most powerful.
Marty: It’s not their eyes I’m aiming for.
Shaughnessy: Do not fuck with me, Marty.
Marty [stands up and leans over into the Mayor’s face]: John…the pipes are bursting again.

Marty: Your job is to sit and look innocent.
Aaron: I am innocent.
Marty: That’s it! That’s just how I want you to look!

Detective: The symbol B32.156 is actually catalogue code for a book discovered in a private reading room located in the church basement. That particular number, the B part, refers to a book, The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. When we opened the book to page 156 we discovered an underlined passage.
Janet: Could you please read this underlined passage to the court?
Detective: “No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true.”
Janet: Thank you. What does that passage mean to you?
Dtective: Well, to me it’s simple. The killer thought his victim was two-faced, dishonest in some way.

Marty: What were you doing at Aaron’s apartment? What were you looking for?
Alex: A tape.
Marty: A tape? A videotape?
Alex: Yeah.
Marty: Of what?
Alex: Sex stuff.
Marty: Sex stuff?
Alex: Do I have to draw a picture for you?

Tommy: Heeere’s motive.

Tommy: You told us the third man did it. You got your third man. And a fourth man and a fifth man…

Janet: Do you know what I would do if someone did that to me? I would kill him, I wouldn’t hesitate. I would stab him 78 times. I would chop off his fingers, slash his throat open, carve numbers in his chest, gouge out his eyes, I swear to God!.. But that’s me. No further questions, your honor.
Roy: Where the hell are you going?!
Janet: Excuse me:
Roy: Hey, you look at me when I’m talking to you, bitch!
Judge: Mr. Stampler!
Roy: Fuck you, lady! Come here!

Marty: You’re good. You are really good.
Roy: Yeah, I did get caught, though, didn’t I?
Marty: So there never…there never was a Roy?
Roy: Jesus Christ, Marty. If that’s what you think, I’m disappointed in you. There never was an Aaron counselor.[/b]

The experience of having an identical twin is one most of us will never share. In some respects it has got to be…weird? But surely not this weird.

DEAD RINGERS
Directed by David Cronenberg

[b]Elliot, Age 9: You’ve heard about sex…
Beverly, Age 9: Sure I have.
Elliot, Age 9: Well I’ve discovered why sex is.
Beverly, Age 9: You have? Fantastic.
Elliot: It’s because humans don’t live under water.
Beverly, Age 9: I don’t get it.
Elliot, Age 9: Well, fish don’t need sex because they just lay the eggs and fertilize them in the water. Humans can’t do that because they don’t live in the water. They have to - internalize the water. Therefore we have sex.
Beverly, Age 9: So you mean humans would have sex if they lived in the water?
Elliot, Age 9: Well they’d have a kind of sex. The kind where you wouldn’t have to touch each other.
Beverly, Age 9: I like that idea. Have you heard of scuba diving? It’s just new.
Elliot, Age 9: Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.
Beverly, Age 9: Exactly.
Elliot, Age 9: [noticing a girl on porch] Are you thinking what I’m thinking?
Beverly, Age 9: Yeah, you ask her.
Elliot, Age 9: Raffaella, will you have sex with us in our bathtub? It’s an experiment.
Raffaella: Are you kidding? Fuck off you freaks. I’m telling my father you talk dirty. Besides, I know for a fact you don’t even know what fuck is.
[retreats into her house]
Elliot, Age 9: [walking away] They’re so different from us. And all because we don’t live under water.

Claire: Am I bad? ls that it? You gonna spank me, Doc?
Beverly: It hadn’t occurred to me.

Elliot: She’s an actress, Bev, she’s a flake. She plays games all the time. You never know who she really is.

Elliot: Well, if you don’t go and see her, I will. And I’ll tell her I’m you…and I’ll do…terrible things to her.
Beverly: What sort of terrible things?

Claire: Do you take drugs?
Beverly: No. Well, for pain. Pain creates character distortion. It’s simply not necessary.

Claire: Listen, Doctor, l think there’s something wrong with you. I don’t know what it is, I can’t put a label on it, but you’re subtly…l don’t know…schizophrenic or something. Sometimes I like you very much and sometimes you’re an amusing lay. Not much more.

Laura: I’ve been hearing about you and the wonderful Mantle boys.
Claire: What are you talking about?
Laura: Claire, this is me, Laura. Please don’t be coy, it’s tedious. Dear Beverly, dear Elliot. Some claim they can’t tell the difference but not me, dear. It’s obvious to me that…Well, before I say anything gauche, tell me which one you’re seeing.
Claire: You mean there’s two of them?
Laura: Don’t be an ass, dear. Of course there are two of them. They’re twins. Identical twins.

Claire: I bet somebody who knew you both - how shall I put it? - knew you both really well could tell the difference. Without measuring your height, I mean.
Elliot: What do you mean?
Claire: Well, Beverly’s the sweet one, and you’re the shit.

Claire: Elliot, let’s ease up on the bullshit for a moment. You can be honest with me. After all, I am laying both of you, aren’t l?
Beverly: Er, now, hang on a…
Claire: It’s a sweet little act you have. You soften them up with all that smarmy concern and along comes Dracula here and polishes them off.

Claire: I’ve been around a bit. I’ve seen some creepy things in the movie business. This is the most disgusting thing that’s ever happened to me.
Elliot: I doubt that
Claire: What is it with you, chum? You can’t get it up unless little brother’s watching?!

Mimsy: Dr Elliot Mantle?
Elliot: Yes.
Mimsy: Special order from Escort Embassy. I’m Mimsy and this is my sister Coral.
Elliot: Hi. Would you like some of this?
Mimsy: Sure.
Elliot: Listen, so that I know which one of you is which l’d like you…
Coral: Coral.
Elliot: Coral to call me Elly and you, Mimsy to call me Bev.

Elliot: You contribute a confusing element to the Mantle brothers’ saga. Possibly a destructive one. It’s not personal. I think you’re terrific.
Claire: But I just don’t have a role in the Mantle brothers’ saga.
Elliot: I suppose if you liked us both in the same way it might make things easier. It has been known to happen.
Claire: I’m sorry but I can’t.
Elliot: Am I really that different from Beverly?
Claire: You really are.

Beverly: What if I take something when you go home?
Elliot: I’m staying here.
Beverly: What if I take something when you go to sleep?
Elliot: I won’t.
Beverly: How will you stay awake?
Elliot: I’ll take something!
Beverly: You’ll take an upper so that I don’t take a downer? This is crazy!

Beverly: [crying about Claire] Yesterday, I found out she was having an affair. She’s unfaithful to me, Eli.
Elliot: Bev, you mustn’t take it so seriously. She’s a showbiz lady. What can you expect?
Beverly: [sobbing hysterically] I’m in love with her! I have to take it seriously!

Wolleck: Fascinating. They’re quite beautiful. What are they?
Beverly: They’re gynaecological instruments for working on mutant women.
Wolleck: Mutant women? That’s a great theme for a show.
Beverly: No, it’s not for a show. It’s not art. I’m a doctor, I need them for my work.

Elliot: There seems to be some problem about surgical instruments. About holding them as evidence of a disturbed mind. Do you know what they’re talking about?
Beverly: I tried to tell you, Elly! You don’t know the kind of patients we’ve been getting lately. You don’t know what’s going on out there. The patients are getting strange. They look all right on the outside but their insides they’re deformed.

Elliot: Don’t do this to me, Bev.
Beverly: But I’m only doing it to me. Why don’t you get along with your very own life?
Elliot: Do you remember the first Siamese twins?
Beverly: Chang and Eng were joined at the chest.
Elliot: Remember how they died?
Beverly: Chang died of a stroke in the middle of the night. He was always the sickly one. He was always the one who drank too much. When Eng woke up beside him to find that his brother was dead he died of fright. Right there in the bed.
Elliot: Does that answer your question?
Beverly: Poor Elly.
Elliot: Poor Bev.

Claire: Tell me about these these tools.
Beverly: Tools?
Claire: Surgical instruments? You had them with you when you came…What are they for? Beverly: They’re for separating Siamese twins.

Beverly: Do you think the morticulator is required, Eng?
Elliot: I think everything is required, Chang.
Beverly: Why are you crying?
Elliot: Separation can be a terrifying thing.[/b]

THREE TIMES [Zui hao de shi guang] 2005

Directed by Hsiao-hsien Hou

A look at love from the perspective of three eras: 1911, 1966, 2005. The same actors interact in three vignettes. It shows the manner in which love will always be rooted in customs and mores – in frames of mind – that change [sometimes dramatically] over the course of time. Here it is situated within the same culture [Taiwan]. In other cultures, the contexts will vary even more.

Imagine for example how these stories would have played out in mainland China.

Then imagine any attempts to speculate [philosophically] on the manner in which love ought to embodied.

The “langauge of the heart” is no less the language of dasein.

Gattica for me was one of the deepest philosophical films I have seen in a while. What is flawed? It asked so many questions about the need to be more than “human” that it really spoke about those who desire to circumvent humanity, so that a struggle to be great is meaningless, and yet at the end we are shown what the difference is between human and more than human, less than the new “human” can excel through hard work. Sometimes the struggle itself to succeed against the odds is what makes us worthy, if you start with everything where is the need to try and hence who will be impressed by you, and how will you learn to struggle against the odds when you are really tested? A very cleverly made film. You’re not your genetics. Invalid is a matter of context. :slight_smile:

Lives of quiet desparation will always be around. Even the ones we see in black and white. But this was a time right on the cusp of America’s own “cultural revolution”.

THE LAST PICTURE SHOW
Directed by Peter Bogdanovich

[b]Sam: I’m surprised you had the nerve to show up after that stomping you took last night.
Sonny: Could’ve been worse.
Sam: Yeah, but you can say that about nearly everything.

Lois: Just remember, beautiful, everything gets old if you do it often enough. So if you want to find out about monotony real quick, marry Duane.

Sonny: I guess you’ll be glad when basketball season’s over.
Ruth: Why?
Sonny: Coach probably don’t get to stay home much during football and basketball season.
Ruth: My God, you don’t know a thing about it, do you?

Sam: If she was here I’d probably be just as crazy now as I was then in about 5 minutes. Ain’t that ridiculous?..Naw, it ain’t really. ‘Cause being crazy about a woman like her is always the right thing to do. Being an old decrepit bag of bones, that’s what’s ridiculous. Gettin’ old.

Jacy: Well you married Daddy when he was poor and he got rich, didn’t he?
Lois: Scared your daddy into getting rich, beautiful.
Jacy: Well if Daddy could do it, Duane could too.
Lois: Not married to you. You’re not scary enough.

Charlene: Tell us about it. What was it like?!
Jacy: I just can’t describe it. I just can’t describe it in words.

Sam: You boys can get on out of here, I don’t want to have no more to do with you. Scarin’ a poor, unfortunate creature like Billy just so’s you could have a few laughs. I’ve been around that trashy behavior all my life, I’m gettin’ tired of puttin’ up with it. Now you can stay out of this pool hall, out of my cafe, and my picture show too. I don’t want no more of your business.
Sonny: We didn’t mean for anything bad to happen, Sam. We…
Sam: You didn’t even have the decency to wash his face.

Sonny: Nothing’s really been right since Sam the Lion died.
Lois: No, it hasn’t.

Lois: I guess if it wasn’t for Sam, I’d have missed it, whatever it is. I’d have been one of them amity types that thinks that playin’ bridge is about the best thing that life has to offer. Old Sam the Lion. Nobody knows where he got that name. I gave it to him. One night it just came to me. He was so pleased…It’s terrible to only meet one man in life who knows what you’re worth. Just terrible. And I’ve looked too. You wouldn’t believe how I’ve looked.

Truck driver: I’d like to know what he was doing with that broom.
Sonny: He was sweeping you sons of bitches, he was sweeping![/b]

Kids and sex – scatological no less! – among other things. Really, how the hell did did they avoid an NC17 rating? I guess because they didn’t actually show much.

These are some really strange [weird, bizarre] people. Unfortunately, there just aren’t enough like them in this world.

ME AND YOU AND EVERYONE WE KNOW
Written and directed by Miranda July

[b]Christine: [seeing his bandage] Whoa, what happened?
Richard: You want the short version or the long one?
Christine: The long one.
Richard: I tried to save my life but it didn’t work.
Christine: Wow. What’s the short one?
Richard: I burned it.

Saleswoman: I think everything’s gonna be computerized in twenty years.
Sylvie: Soup won’t be computerized.
Saleswoman: Why not?
Sylvie: It’s a liquid.

Michael: So, tell Ellen about the shoe guy. Did you go back to the store?
Christine: Yeah. And it turns out he’s a child killer. So, oh, well.

Andrew: Yeah, see, this is why you don’t want a village raising your kid…because there’s sketchy parts of the village and some of the villagers are junkies and child molesters.

Richard: …no more Internet when I’m not here. I have to be able to call you.
Peter: Maybe you should buy us cell phones.
Richard: No. Just stay off the fucking computer when I’m not here!
Peter: You can’t make us stay off the computer if you’re not here. You won’t be here to keep us off it.

Christine: We have a whole life to live together you fucker, but it can’t start until you call.

Christine: Fuck! Fuck you! Fuck me! Fuck old people! Fuck children! Fuck peace!

Andrew: Dude, did you just give her the family discount?
Richard: Yeah. She’s my neighbor, and I’m trying to work on my karma. Do you know what karma means?
Andrew: Yeah.
Richard: It means that she owes me one.

Robby: Say, “You poop into my butt hole and I poop it back into your butt hole…back and forth…forever”.[/b]