I second the suggestion of fellow Angeleno Ross Anglin that people look at _Mortal Thoughts_. There are a lot of interesting questions about this film, including how it relates to Rudolph's other films--or fails to. One interesting aspect of _Mortal Thoughts_ is that the past events we see during the first 4/5 of the film begin to be relayed verbally by the Demi Moore character, and then we see the events transpiring. When we see new past facts at the film's conclusion, Demi's character is alone, and so we have seem to have a character's remembered flashback rather than the image conforming to the character's narration to another character. Thus the film preserves *some* sense of 'authenticity': when the film shows what Demi tells, it may be lying, but when it shows what she thinks/remembers, it's not. This seems unlike _The Usual Suspects_, in which it's almost all up for grabs at the end. Sincerely, Edward R. O'Neill UCLA General Education Program ---- Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the University of Alabama.