Hmmm, I remember discussing the first clone murder with a friend as we watched. I was firmly in the camp that Angier was actually murdered by the first clone, ala Solaris. In retrospect, I can't remember how they set up the cloning thing, or where the original hat/person ended up. Did the original get whisked away, leaving a clone, or vice-versa? Not sure if they ever made that clear, or if this fact was also obfuscated to confuse us more. The more I think about this aspect of the film, the more I want to re-watch those scenes to see exactly what was going on. The reason I think the original Angier was killed by the clone is based on the split-second reaction of the entity that was murdered, which seemed one of recognition mixed with confusion. As if Angier got teleported away, leaving a clone, while expecting the clone to appear in the machine, only to find himself stepping out of the machine to find his clone reaching for the gun. If this is the case, I would think that each time the cloning occurred during the trick, at a later time, a slightly altered, perhaps slightly lesser clone would survive, while the current "original" or oldest clone would die.
Anyone clear this up? Watch that first reaction closely...
Anyone clear this up? Watch that first reaction closely...
Meanwhile, how many clones would have to kick that drowning-tub night after night before the thick glass finally cracks, breaks, and the whole truth comes flooding out? Also, the backstage assistants are blind but not deaf. How many nights do they sit listening to the muted sounds of the drowning man's struggle before they finally figure out something ain't kosier?