A few things I don't understand… (Spoilers)
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — The Usual Suspects
madaznfootballer — 9 years ago(May 31, 2016 01:36 PM)
- So Keaton was killed on the boat, but what happened to his body? It seems too convenient that they found 5 bodies (6 including Arturo later on) at the beginning of the movie with Keaton not being one of them. This is obviously key in the cop deducing that Keaton is Soze so what exactly happened to Keaton's body?
- What was the point of the line-up and how did Soze set it up?
- Why was Kujan allowed to detain Verbal until his bail was posted if he already had immunity?
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Stratego — 9 years ago(May 31, 2016 02:08 PM)
- So Keaton was killed on the boat, but what happened to his body? It seems too convenient that they found 5 bodies (6 including Arturo later on) at the beginning of the movie with Keaton not being one of them. This is obviously key in the cop deducing that Keaton is Soze so what exactly happened to Keaton's body?
They found lots of bodies, but they weren't identified yet. Only Arturo's body could be identified by the FBI because he wasn't severely burned. Kujan doesn't think Soze is Keaton because his body isn't there, it's because he had already staged his death before. - What was the point of the line-up and how did Soze set it up?
The point was to bring the whole gang together for the job. Soze is powerful, he most likely has someone on the inside. - Why was Kujan allowed to detain Verbal until his bail was posted if he already had immunity?
Verbal was only detained until his bail was posted. Kujan actually has no authority or official permission to interrogate Verbal, but Rabin allows him to do so anyway. That's why Kujan call it "just a friendly chat to kill time". Verbal could've shut his mouth, but he chose to talk, well beyond his time to post bail.
- So Keaton was killed on the boat, but what happened to his body? It seems too convenient that they found 5 bodies (6 including Arturo later on) at the beginning of the movie with Keaton not being one of them. This is obviously key in the cop deducing that Keaton is Soze so what exactly happened to Keaton's body?
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Stratego — 9 years ago(November 13, 2016 06:26 PM)
Why did Verbal make them all suspects?
We can't be sure, but the most logical reason would be to get them together and convince them to do the job.
Why was there no coke on the ship?
I'm pretty sure the movie answers this question directly. There was no coke because it wasn't a drug deal. The Hungarians were there to buy the guy who betrayed Soze from the Argentinians.
Why did they burn LAPD taxis?
It was a New York taxi and they burned it in public so the corrupt cops involved in the taxi service would be exposed. They wanted to take revenge on the police for arresting them. Another bonus was that they couldn't chase them after fleeing the scene.
Why did they kill that guy in the car?
We don't know what really happened since it's told by Verbal who's an unreliable narrator, but it seems he killed him because he wasn't willing to give them the briefcase. -
Klockard23 — 9 years ago(May 31, 2016 07:41 PM)
- So Keaton was killed on the boat, but what happened to his body? It seems too convenient that they found 5 bodies (6 including Arturo later on) at the beginning of the movie with Keaton not being one of them. This is obviously key in the cop deducing that Keaton is Soze so what exactly happened to Keaton's body?
Bryan Singer mentioned on the commentary track that when the police lineup scene ends with the focus on Keaton's face and then cuts to the close-up of a charred body, it's meant to be a subtle hint that the burnt corpse in the dock might be his.
- So Keaton was killed on the boat, but what happened to his body? It seems too convenient that they found 5 bodies (6 including Arturo later on) at the beginning of the movie with Keaton not being one of them. This is obviously key in the cop deducing that Keaton is Soze so what exactly happened to Keaton's body?
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sesquick-seabag — 9 years ago(June 02, 2016 11:13 AM)
Well all the bodies on deck would likely have been burned to a crisp, like the one we see when Baer arrives on the scene. I do wonder how Arturo's corpse ended up in the water, though, when he was killed in his cabin.
The point was that Kobyashi would meet with them after the line up and make the proposition to them there and then, no? When he does catch up with them he says as much:
You were not to be released until I had come to see you. It seems Mr Keaton's attourney Ms Finneran was a little too effective in expediting his release
. "You were not to be released" sounds like there are moles in the police force pulling some strings. But my question would probably be: Why not just simply have them kidnapped and brought to Kobayashi?
He wasn't. -
filompra — 9 years ago(June 02, 2016 11:34 AM)
Why being loud when you can be subtle?
Soze doesn't want have to kidnap nobody.
He's a God-like mobster with connections up the wazoo.
He knows that all he needs is to get these men in the same room and - first of all - he knows they're going to come up with a job (like Verbal says "you don't put 5 men like that in the same cell") and, once he finds out who the fence is (Redfoot, in California. Likely another one of Soze's pawns) he decides to set the whole crew up with the disaster job in the parking lot.
Like Kobayashi says "we can see that Mr. Redfoot testifies against you, gentlemen".
It's better to come up with something like that, rather than kidnapping 4 guys, don't you think? -
sesquick-seabag — 9 years ago(June 02, 2016 06:12 PM)
Well I'm thinking it might have been subtler not to have to involve the police..
If he has agents that could track and kill Fenster, why not just have them kidnap the suspects, bring them somewhere where Kobayashi can make the proposition to them?
Redfoot being able to testify against them over the murder of Saul Berg is ultimately neither here nor there when the deal is: accept this mission and take the money if you live, or refuse and face certain death (probably after knowing your loved ones have been violated and killed). From what Kobayashi told them - which I quoted - it doesn't seem that Redfoot was in on it. Most probably Verbal communicated with Kobayashi about their movements after Edie got them released (the taxi heist) and he was onto Redfoot before they met with him. "Mr Redfoot knew nothing". -
sesquick-seabag — 9 years ago(June 30, 2016 07:46 PM)
Something I might also ask is who exactly was Arturo Marquez? I mean, what did he do for Soze? You'd think he was someone high up if he actually had the kind of inside knowledge of Soze's operations he claimed to have (that the Hungarian mob were prepared to pay millions and millions for). But Rabin (or Baer, I can't remember which) refers to him as a "petty smuggler from Argentina".
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Stratego — 9 years ago(July 01, 2016 08:25 PM)
Well, to the police he was only known as a petty smuggler from Argentina, but in reality he apparently was part of a huge criminal empire, which he had been able to hide well up until then. Could it be that Arturo Marquez wasn't his true or only identity?
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sesquick-seabag — 9 years ago(July 01, 2016 08:36 PM)
That's kind of what I've been thinking, though the script is tantalisingly opaque there. Kinda like Verbal poses as a petty conman. It also makes me wonder about Verbal - is he Sose, or Sose's right-hand-man and assassin? What do you think? I believe Singer and McQuarrie said they conceived the movie so that it would be inferred that Verbal Kint is Soze (which is Turkish for Verbal). But do criminal kingpins do hits up close? Usually they have deputies (which Verbal could be) and a spokesman/counsellor (Kobayashi). All the ending ultimately implies, necessarily, is that Verbal is misrepresenting himself.
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Stratego — 9 years ago(July 02, 2016 04:54 AM)
I think that all kinds of things, like the fax, his fake limp, the fact that he's the gunman, his lies that are as grandiose as Soze's myth, are supposed to suggest that Verbal is actually Soze. But there's certainly room to interpret it differently. Soze wanted to shoot Marquez himself, because he couldn't trust anyone else. He had just been betrayed by someone close to him and he wanted to make sure he was really dead.
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sesquick-seabag — 9 years ago(July 05, 2016 06:56 PM)
Soze wanted to shoot Marquez himself, because he couldn't trust anyone else. He had just been betrayed by someone close to him and he wanted to make sure he was really dead.
Maybe, although one thing to bear in mind is that it's Kujan who assumes that Soze needed to assassinate Marquez personally "to make sure he got his man" but because, at that point, he's absolutely hell-bent on following his theory that Keaton is at the root of it all. So in a way he needs to believe Keaton is Soze in order to justify to himself why Keaton was involved. We of course know Keaton wasn't Soze, so it should be up to us to decide if Soze would have needed to take out Marquez himself to be sure he was silenced. I have to say it doesn't strike me as something that the spider in the centre of the web would do personally. -
Stratego — 9 years ago(July 05, 2016 07:50 PM)
Yes, it's Kujan who mentions this and he's talking about Keaton. But he also believes Keaton is the man behind Soze, so it doesn't really matter who Soze really is. If Keaton would personally kill Marquez, then Verbal would as well. The idea is that after such a betrayal, Soze doesn't trust anyone else to get rid of him. No doubt it also gives him satisfaction to pull the trigger himself.
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sesquick-seabag — 9 years ago(July 08, 2016 05:46 PM)
Yeah but it's only Kujan's assumption that Keaton would want to kill Marquez personally. By that point Kujan is, if not quite what you'd call deluded, then failing to be completely objective. Can he really be satisfied with his theory that Keaton "was Keiser Soze, the man who could etc,etc" without hesitating for a second? He has no proof Keaton masterminded it; it's just what he wants to believe. Verbal recognizes that and just feeds him the lines he wants to hear.
The idea is that after such a betrayal, Soze doesn't trust anyone else to get rid of him. No doubt it also gives him satisfaction to pull the trigger himself.
Could be; could just as well not be. I don't see why Soze would necessarily have to be the one to pull the trigger just to be sure the mission was accomplished. Verbal could be his lieutenant or an assassin who he pays to do dangerous jobs. Some concrete proof of Marquez's death could have been obtained without great difficulty, given his deep police and legal connections.
I always thought Spacey looked a little young, anyway, in 1995, to be the guy who had already become an infamous world criminal by the year 1981 - as according to Kobayashi, Keaton's offence against Soze dates back to that time:
In nineteen-eighty one, Mr. Keaton, you
participated in the hijacking of a truck
in Buffalo, New York. The cargo was raw
steel. Steel that belonged to Mr. Soze
and was destined for Pakistan to be used
in a Nuclear reactor. A very profitable
violation of U.N. Regulations. You had no
way of knowing this, because the man
shipping the steel was working for Mr.
Soze without his knowledge.
Of course, that's just speculation. -
Stratego — 9 years ago(July 12, 2016 06:25 AM)
Yeah but it's only Kujan's assumption that Keaton would want to kill Marquez personally.
No. It's also Keaton in the opening scene, it's also the Hungarian in the hospital. None of the other characters in the movie ever questions or contradicts Kujan's believe that Soze himself killed Marquez. Soze had just been betrayed by someone close to him, it totally makes sense he wouldn't trust anyone else to do it. His anger could also have been a reason to do it himself.
Can he really be satisfied with his theory that Keaton "was Keiser Soze, the man who could etc,etc" without hesitating for a second? He has no proof Keaton masterminded it; it's just what he wants to believe. Verbal recognizes that and just feeds him the lines he wants to hear.
That's the entire point of the movie.
I don't see why Soze would necessarily have to be the one to pull the trigger just to be sure the mission was accomplished.
Like I said, Soze had just been betrayed by someone close to him, it totally makes sense he wouldn't trust anyone else to do it. But hey, if you want to believe that Verbal was just a henchman, you're free to do so. The ending is ambiguous enough to allow that. But the director himself has said that Verbal is supposed to be Soze.
I always thought Spacey looked a little young, anyway, in 1995, to be the guy who had already become an infamous world criminal by the year 1981 - as according to Kobayashi, Keaton's offence against Soze dates back to that time
One, that's the story Verbal tells Kujan. We don't know if it's true. Two, if it is true, it could very well have been at the beginning of Soze's international criminal career. Three, even if that was truly said to Keaton, it doesn't mean Soze had anything to do with it. He could've been lying. I was under the impression that much of the Soze myth was exaggerated to create fear. -
sesquick-seabag — 9 years ago(July 14, 2016 07:29 PM)
No. It's also Keaton in the opening scene, it's also the Hungarian in the hospital. None of the other characters in the movie ever questions or contradicts Kujan's believe that Soze himself killed Marquez. Soze had just been betrayed by someone close to him, it totally makes sense he wouldn't trust anyone else to do it. His anger could also have been a reason to do it himself.
Thinking that Soze killed Marquez (and that was the ultimate motive for hitting the boat rather than disrupting a dope deal) is one thing. But it's a huge leap in logic from that to assuming (without any evidence) Keaton is Soze, though, wouldn't you say? But Kujan is so blinkered by that point he doesn't stop and think. He doesn't mention his theory to anyone else anyway.
That's the entire point of the movie.
So you agree then.
Like I said, Soze had just been betrayed by someone close to him, it totally makes sense he wouldn't trust anyone else to do it. But hey, if you want to believe that Verbal was just a henchman, you're free to do so. The ending is ambiguous enough to allow that. But the director himself has said that Verbal is supposed to be Soze.
Well yeah, it makes sense - but being necessarily true is something else. No piece of evidence in the movie points to an unavoidable conclusion that the man calling himself Verbal Kint is Keyser Soze. It point to the fact that he's probably the assassin on the boat, that he's misrepresenting himself. I know Singer has said that for him Verbal is Soze, but I'm sure I recall an interview where McQuarrie says that's not the only possible interpretation.
I was under the impression that much of the Soze myth was exaggerated to create fear.
Then why is information about him and the names of people who work for him so valuable?