Originally Posted by SamsoniteDelilah
Not at all. I was talking about the scene being justified within the context of the script, not saying that revenge is justified.
Let me see if I can express myself more clearly.
The murder of the woman seemed more angry and vengeful than the other murders, to me. This was accomplished by showing her naked and vulnerable. This device is rather clumsy and transparent, as Pidzilla has said, and would simply be jarring in the context of the film, were it not for the fact that it is used by the writers to convey a salient point. That point is that when killings become personal, emotional, needlessly cruel, they cease to be merely revenge (which is not a good thing, but arguably useful in certain situations) and become more clearly deplorable - vindictive and thoughtless reaction. That point is conveyed later, in the scene where the older assassin expresses regret over having left the woman naked.
It's possible, in fact, that the point was to draw the comparison of that personal murder to the acts of revenge being carried out on a government level, and that the authors were saying "it's no different".
It's unfortunate that they chose to shorthand the personal nature of her killing by making her a nude woman, rather than making a non-sexualized personal connection, which would have accomplished the same comparison without turning the woman into a sex object.
Let me see if I can express myself more clearly.
The murder of the woman seemed more angry and vengeful than the other murders, to me. This was accomplished by showing her naked and vulnerable. This device is rather clumsy and transparent, as Pidzilla has said, and would simply be jarring in the context of the film, were it not for the fact that it is used by the writers to convey a salient point. That point is that when killings become personal, emotional, needlessly cruel, they cease to be merely revenge (which is not a good thing, but arguably useful in certain situations) and become more clearly deplorable - vindictive and thoughtless reaction. That point is conveyed later, in the scene where the older assassin expresses regret over having left the woman naked.
It's possible, in fact, that the point was to draw the comparison of that personal murder to the acts of revenge being carried out on a government level, and that the authors were saying "it's no different".
It's unfortunate that they chose to shorthand the personal nature of her killing by making her a nude woman, rather than making a non-sexualized personal connection, which would have accomplished the same comparison without turning the woman into a sex object.
I am in complete agreement. I could not have said it better.
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Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons.....for you are crunchy and good with ketchup.
Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons.....for you are crunchy and good with ketchup.