Very Hitchcock, he looks like Rupert in my eyes

Payton 2021-11-13 08:01:22

I like the tension in the first half very much: no one is here at the beginning, and the relationship and character of the characters are expressed through the dialogue between the two people, making you nervous about what will happen next, hanging your appetite, and the personality contradictions between Brandon and Philip It also makes people feel that things may be revealed at any time (cutting from their vision to the story, giving people a feeling of hope that they can succeed without being discovered, and it feels like they are in a group). At the beginning, I thought Philip was the projection of the audience (he was relatively weak but the tension and unnaturalness of killing someone), Brandon was closer to Hitchcock, and he would complete successfully with Philip, who was afraid of nervousness. This "art", but the story developed, and found that the sense of identity with Brandon was diminishing bit by bit. He hoped to match Janette and Kenneth, thinking that the woman was with David because of her love for vanity. But later I realized that it was in his own opinion. This was not the case. He just thought he was smart and wanted to manipulate others and the set of "privileged privileges" theories he recognized, and Rupert later appeared more like it. He is a normal person with weird thinking. He has the theories and ideas of killing, but he has never had the courage to practice it. He is more like an ordinary person and an assailant. He is more like the incarnation of Hitchcock himself. . At the end, Rupert turned back to the apartment and talked with Brandon and Philip, but he had already begun to doubt when he left. Why didn't they expose them when everyone was there? I think there may be three points: 1 he is not convinced, but he is just skeptical, 2 he is the proponent of the theory of higher people, he has a sense of identity in this matter, and he has the same anxiety and anxiety after he suspects that they kill people. Uneasy or even guilt, he didn't want to expose it on that occasion, as if to expose himself, but to "solve contradictions" internally among "high-ranking people." 3 David’s father and girlfriend were both people who were worried about him. If this is true, then they will certainly not let Brandon and Philip be spared, and the latter will not give up and wait for the police. If you come to catch, both sides will be injured, and the consequences will be disastrous. So he chose to stay and expose them, so he persuaded the two face to face, let them fall into law, and threw out the words to refute his theory: "Do you think you are God?

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Extended Reading

Rope quotes

  • Brandon: Perhaps what is called "civilization" is hypocrisy.

  • Rupert Cadell: You were really pushing your point rather hard. You aren't planning to do away with a few inferiors, by any chance?

    Brandon: I'm a creature of whim. Who knows?