Saw it coming…
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Osujin — 18 years ago(August 10, 2007 04:18 PM)
As soon as Dil was introduced, I immediately thought to myself, "There's a slight chance I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure that's a guy" and when the twist came, I felt proud of my deduction (I laughed pretty loud actually). For me it was the face and voice combination; I might have excused one, but the combo made the fact stand out.
It seems I'm not in the minority. -
darth_sidious — 18 years ago(September 03, 2007 02:39 AM)
The clue that Fergus was probably inclined towards the other side is evident when he pulls out Forest's penis in the woods.
Fergus knew that Dil was a man, he got suckered in because love clouded his judgement. I think him being sick was not because he was duped, but he realised who he actually was, and had to confront himself.
There are other clues about Dil - like speaking in third person - 3 people in the relationship, Dil (male and female) and Fergus. -
Redrum237 — 18 years ago(November 10, 2007 07:06 AM)
I think this was pretty obvious. Two big hints were when the bartender began to tell Fergus that there's something he should know about Dil (but gets cut off) and when Fergus reaches for Dil's crotch when they're making out and s/he grabs Fergus' hand and takes it away (before he finds out the truth).
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Rie4973 — 14 years ago(August 29, 2011 09:29 AM)
I kinda figured when Dil was singing at the Metro, I was like, "Damn she's got some big hands! Wait a minute."
"The unopened package was a waterproof, solar-powered, satelite phone"- Robert Zemeckis, Cast Away -
alli2001 — 14 years ago(October 31, 2011 12:52 AM)
I think those responses are pretty sad and it nearly broke my heart when Fergus' response was to go throw up. How cruel.
That being said, I also pegged Dil as male/transgender very early on. In fact, as soon as she appears, I was thinking the eye makeup seemed very over-the-top and then as soon as she spoke I knew something was off, but thought that maybe I was overanalyzing. Honestly, for most of the movie I was trying to fight that initial reaction and convince myself that Dil was a plain ol' girl. But then of course, the scene where the hairdressers clap and of course the scene where she pulls away when Fergus/Jimmy tries to touch her basically convinced me that my initial reaction had some real weight.
I think men can make themselves into beautiful women. I think the actor did an amazing job of being a convincing woman, and was drop dead sexy, but by the time the robe came off, I wasless than shocked. I think it was a combination of the voice and the subtle clues left by the director that tipped me off. -
horrorshowmovie — 14 years ago(December 01, 2011 11:26 PM)
Yeah, I JUST started watching this on netflix, and the voice gave it away immediately. I've actually just paused after the hair cut scene, and I'll go watch the rest later. I couldn't keep watching the movie without confirming my suspicion.
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lima83@bol.com.br — 14 years ago(December 26, 2011 09:03 PM)
When did you guys watch this movie?
I watched it when I was around 11-12 years old, back in 93 when it was released in VHS, watched it with my mother.
Obviously I was too naive to get the twist, but neither my mother did it.
I watched this movie many years later with my now wife, and when Dil appears on-screen for the first time, she said "That's a man!" I went "WTF?". I tried to play it like "What? Of course not, are you crazy?", but when her hands shows up my wife said "Those are man's hands!", and when she spoke, my wife again said "Jesus, of course that's a man! Hear this voice! It may be a woman in the movie, but this actor is obviously a man!"
I thought that people at 92 was maybe more naive than we are today, and would have a harder time guessing.
For a random reason I just watched the trailer of this movie, and when Dil shows up, I thought "How the hell we didn't figured it out within the last 3 minutes Dil is on screen?" -
chimein — 13 years ago(February 17, 2013 04:57 AM)
I don't know if it is the fact that people watched it back then, that they did not figure it out. Being a female, I think I can pick up on who else is a female.The voice, the big hands. I don't know of any other female with hands that big. If that didn't confirm it, yes, the bartender. He said, "she is" I think that confirmed my suspicions, then I looked around the bar and noticed she was not the only transgender there. If those clues didn't knock me over the head, the make out scene where she took his hands away from her private area.
I was just hoping this was not the twist. Any other twist, is usually close to impossible for me to figure. I am one of those people who never gets the twist until it is revealed. I, however, know a man when I see one. -
sirjeremy — 13 years ago(March 10, 2013 06:13 AM)
It's not supposed to be a complete shock - there's clues up to that point.
In her book about the film, Jane Giles says this:
"Contrary to the film's American press campaign, the narrative success of
The Crying Game
does not rely on its audience believing from the outset that Jaye Davidson is a woman. This film is about the redemption of Fergus, from whose point of view the story is told. Fergus assumes that Dil is a woman until the moment he sees she is not. Jaye Davidson's Dil, therefore, had to be convincing or the audience would not believe that Fergus could mistake a he for a she. But Dil is not
so
convincing that the viewer reels in disbelief at the film's sleight of hand, and on a second viewing one can see that Jordan has 'played fairly' by giving plenty of hints and double entendres among a whole shoal of red herrings."
But yeah, some people were very much taken by surprise, especially back then when there was even less knowledge of trans people than what there is now. I remember watching this on VHS with my mother almost 20 years ago and she was shocked (I'd sneaked into see it at the cinema and knew beforehand what the 'twist' was). -
ABetterDay — 12 years ago(November 30, 2013 11:45 AM)
This film is on the THIS TV Network tonight.
To mostly echo another post in this thread, no, there is no way that ANY heterosexual male didn't realize immediately that the character was a male impersonating a female. It just couldn't happen. A woman could have been fooled but no truly normal male could have been.
Remember When Movies Didn't Have To Be Politically Correct?