Eddies Final Break
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fbi__press — 13 years ago(December 25, 2012 04:33 AM)
as am I, but for the sake of the battle, it would have been nice to see who was the victor between the raw rookie and the seasoned vet. I think it would have ended up on the editors floor (for length, if nothing else), but it would have been a good game.
"Remember to douche before you open your mouth - I dunno where it's been."
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MyDarkStar — 13 years ago(March 23, 2013 04:00 PM)
I don't really think it matters who won that game even if you just want to compare their skill levels. I just assumed at the end that they would end up playing each other for years and years throughout the pool circuit. So one night of pool probably still wouldn't even definitively decide who was better.
You can compare it to professional tennis. One player might beat the other on one particular day. But they'll probably end up playing each other a dozen more times throughout their career, and that's when you'll know for sure who is truly better. -
There_Is_No_Sayid — 13 years ago(October 22, 2012 09:22 AM)
He's back in the game. He had "had the brakes put on" him a long time ago and had just been around the peripheries of the game, acting as a stakehorse and maybe shooting a little pool now and then. But now he's a real competitor again.
"Unless Alpert's covered in bacon grease, I don't think Hugo can track anything." -
jbaddock — 13 years ago(February 16, 2013 02:24 PM)
There's also the point that Eddie has realised that he's more interested in competing than making money - he feels betrayed by Vincent 'dumping' the game, even though he's made a good deal of money out of it. When Eddie goes on to play in the next competition, he will be there to win it, fair and square - but will Vincent?
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dakinariten — 12 years ago(September 22, 2013 04:16 PM)
That ending is superb - the music thundering in with the sledgehammer break, especially when he's shown that he can get the 9 in on the break easily enough. It's a powerhouse ending, built up with fast-talking emotive dialogue from two well-developed characters and the winner of the match is irrelevant. You just need to know that it's happening.
I love that scene, and it's probably my favourite of the movie. Wouldn't change it for the world.