mitsuki lover wrote:So who did the magic consultation..i.e. what magician did they get to teach the actors the various tricks of the trade?
mitsuki lover wrote:So who did the magic consultation..i.e. what magician did they get to teach the actors the various tricks of the trade?
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:I really want to see this, Flags of our Fathers, and The Departed. FINALLY! Some stuff that isn't cheesy or bad this year. (Well I guess the Departed kind of is, it's a remake after all)
I mean, the only impressive movies I've seen this year so far were all Korean.
Mave wrote:An added plus was having most of everything brilliantly explained at the end left me with an extreme sense of contentment. Genius.
Yumie wrote:QUESTION! For those who have seen the movie, that is.
[spoiler] My question is, Did Alfred actually have a twin brother, or was it too a clone? See, I originally assumed they were natural born twins too, as did almost everyone else I've talked to about it. However, there's one huge thing I forgot when I made that assumption. And that is, when Ainge went to Alfred and asked him how he did his trick, and told him to write down everything he'd need to know to do it, do you remember what he wrote? "TESLA." The name of the scientist who created the cloning device for Ainge. Now, unless he had actually been cloned, why would he write that? How would he even know about Tesla and what he was working on? Wouldn't he have just written something like "twins" instead?
Now, the main reason why I thought they were twins was because of the fraternal way they acted towards eachother-- the arguments they got into and the way that the one cried as the other was being hauled off to his execution. If I had a clone, I think I'd be more commanding to it, and not sisterly. So, they at least acted like brothers, but were they really?[/spoiler]
Radical Dreamer wrote:WHOA. o_o I had definitely not thought of that....o_o
[SPOILER]I guess the only thing that makes me think it was actually his brother was the little boy at the beginning. After Alfred does the canary trick, the little boy asks, "But where is its brother?" Since that's most definitely hinting at Alfred having a brother, then I guess that would make sense, right?
But then again, you have to think...He kept his brother a secret the entire time he knew Angier and the others. Granted, his parents weren't around, and there's no evidence to say that he had lived in the city where the film took place all his life, but it still seems like it would be difficult to have a twin one day, and then suddenly have Fallon the next day. Still, when Angier buried Fallon alive, Alfred dug him up very quickly, as he was worried about him. But due to the obsessive nature of both of these men, was that because he wanted to save his brother, or because he wanted to save his act? O_o
Then again, Michael Caine's character knew about his "twin" as well, so...did he simply know about it because he knew about the machine? But he didn't know that Angier had cloned himself, and he seemed very surprised when he did. And I guess we also have to ask how long the machine had been invented...Did Alfred have time to find it? ACK, it's all so mind-bending! XD[/SPOILER]
Just when you think you have it all figured out...XD
Radical Dreamer wrote:[SPOILER=Continuation, after giving it even more thought....XD]Then AGAIN....Alfred and his brother/clone/whatever had very different personalities. Remember, there was the whole thing with how Alfred loved Sarah one day, but not other days (since it was his twin/clone on some days) and "Freddie" loved Scarlett Johannsen's character (whose name escapes me for the moment). Also, Alfred was a very fatherly figure. Like Kokhiri said, the clones of Angier seemed to actually be Angier. Although, I suppose that, since Alfred wanted to see his daughter while he was in prison (the imprisoned one wasn't the father of the little girl), he might have been somewhat fatherly, too. But, on the other hand, it could have been an act, to try and keep his low profile (or it could have been his niece, if he was indeed Alfred's brother).
So basically, in all that rambling, I haven't really proved much, and I still can't figure out how the "Tesla" on the note could mean anything besides "clone". XD If anyone wants to add on though, feel free. XD[/SPOILER]
Radical Dreamer wrote:Just when you think you have it all figured out...XD
jon_jinn wrote:wow. all the spoiler boxes and stuff make the movie seem like a really interesting and clever film. good gosh i really REALLY want to see this movie now.
Mave wrote:
[SPOILER] There were times Borden seemed so clueless. "I don't know" and the parts where he seems less confident. ... And then we have the other Borden who seemed to know everything. It's this Borden who tied the knot of Angier's wife, told Angier about Tesla and smiled when the little boy pointed out the "Where's his brother." [/SPOILER]
Radical Dreamer wrote:[SPOILER]Actually, my theory on that was that Alfred (the father) did not tie the knot, but the other less-amiable brother/clone did. Since he tied the knot that she (Julia) may not have been able to slip instead of tying a knot that was easier for her, I was led to believe that the twin tied the knot, rather than the "real" Alfred. I assume this is true, since I assume that the "real" Alfred is the one who wrote the diary that Angier was reading when he shouted out, "How can he not know?!" I guess another piece of evidence for that would be trying to figure out which Alfred told Angier that the first time he was asked. Hmmmm....[/SPOILER]
Man, I need to go see it again...XD
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