NOTE: A "Usual Suspects" spoiler below: DAVID MOON <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > and, although the name escapes me, the recent (last three years) film > with Liam Neeson playing a "set-up" man fighting for his life, after > his wife and an artist are found murdered in a Brighton hotel bedroom > is also a fine example of narration twisted to win the audience's > sympathies. > David Moon Yes, I just watched that Liam Neeson film on cable (and the name escapes me, too). I don't think anyone has mentioned the new film "The Usual Suspects" in which the entire plot, told in flashback, is called into question by the narrator's unreliability -- there are even a few things like "Reversal of Fortune" and "Rashomon" in which questionable events are seen a couple of times with different details -- which makes you think while you're watching it that you are getting close to the "truth" and then the ENTIRE rug gets pulled out from under you. I am partial to this type of film because I have written a "brilliant" (of course) screenplay (a kind of cerebral "Total Recall") in which a futuristic agent has his memories manipulated. Kirk W. Laughlin Grants Coordinator Pacific Science Center Seattle, WA [log in to unmask] ---- To signoff SCREEN-L, e-mail [log in to unmask] and put SIGNOFF SCREEN-L in the message. Problems? Contact [log in to unmask]