Harsh on Percy?
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bradleyluke79 — 12 years ago(November 26, 2013 10:05 AM)
I understand where you're coming from. Percy is violent and sadistic towards prisoners who have done despicable things so maybe they deserve it. And they do. But this wasn't Percy's way of punishing them for what they'd done. Percy just wanted to make them suffer. He showed no remorse, no empathy, no sympathy and was just a terrible person. Whereas with Delacroix for example, he committed a horrible crime, but while on the mile he showed a sensitive kind to him, this was something Percy lacked, Percy was just and all round terrible person. The fact that Delacroix had slight happiness annoyed him, so he crushed Delacroix's only friend and last piece of happiness before he killed Delacroix in the most inhumane way possible.
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bradleyluke79 — 12 years ago(November 26, 2013 10:07 AM)
I understand where you're coming from. Percy is violent and sadistic towards prisoners who have done despicable things so maybe they deserve it. And they do. But this wasn't Percy's way of punishing them for what they'd done. Percy just wanted to make them suffer. He showed no remorse, no empathy, no sympathy and was just a terrible person. Whereas with Delacroix for example, he committed a horrible crime, but while on the mile he showed a sensitive kind to him, this was something Percy lacked, Percy was just and all round terrible person. The fact that Delacroix had slight happiness annoyed him, so he crushed Delacroix's only friend and last piece of happiness before he killed Delacroix in the most inhumane way possible.
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rachel-wyyung-1 — 12 years ago(January 10, 2014 07:12 PM)
Personally I think education makes a difference also. Del killed so if course he was bad, but after all people like him obviously shows they had no education no good upbringing. Thus some of them made poor choices in life. However, Percy had connections and he certainly didn't look like he was from poor family background, he was educated and yet he still developed such ruthless and sick personalities made him a real scumbag.
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strntz — 12 years ago(January 19, 2014 08:15 AM)
Personally I think education makes a difference also. Del killed so if course he was bad, but after all people like him obviously shows they had no education no good upbringing.
Good point. Some people are born rotten (Percy), and others have never been shown love or taught right from wrong.
One thing that Del said that was very telling was when, right before his execution, he told Paul, Brutal, Dean, and Harry that they good men, and he wished he had known them earlier in his life. Had he grown up around better types of men, his life may have taken a whole different course. I didn't read the book, but Del on film was clearly remorseful of what he had done.
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CartmanRocks — 12 years ago(January 11, 2014 03:35 PM)
The prisoners were rapists and murderers, but the sweet little mouse was not. Anyone who steps on a poor little mouse on purpose doesn't deserve to live, in my opinion.
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Dinosaw — 12 years ago(February 13, 2014 12:53 AM)
Yes he was very sadistic in the film sabatoged dell's execution but did he deserve to be turned into a vegetable?
I think he rightfully deserved that - it was far from cruel. I mean, did he die? No. Was he in living in pain? Didn't look like it - he seemed more like chilled afterwards.
And if that had not happened, he would've been in prison - which is a worse punishment than being in mental facility I say, no? Oh, in prison for killing a cold blooded murderer!
I actually thought that the prison guards were more 'harsh' on Percy - When Percy was talking scornfully to the dead body, I didn't see why Brute had to be a 'white knight' on Percy by telling him off (you hypocrite, you were also involved at executing him).
Percy was overall bratty. But the guards seemed overly harsh on him, considering that he was only assaulting prisoners on death row rather than innocent hospital patients. They should've thought about that a little.
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rickb69 — 11 years ago(March 27, 2015 10:04 AM)
I actually thought that the prison guards were more 'harsh' on Percy - When Percy was talking scornfully to the dead body, I didn't see why Brute had to be a 'white knight' on Percy by telling him off (you hypocrite, you were also involved at executing him)
Brutal was just doing his job. Percy said to the dead prisoner "Send us a post card from hell and let us know if it is hot enough for you." Brutal said the prisoner paid his debt to society and that he was square
Del was remorseful when he was in the electric chair and he said don't forget about Mouseville. Percy said there is no Mouseville, that the other guards only told him that fairytale to keep him quiet. Harry looked like WTF. Percy didn't wet the sponge when he put it on Del's head and Del literally fried to death instead of being electrocuted
And if that had not happened, he would've been in prison - which is a worse punishment than being in mental facility I say, no? Oh, in prison for killing a cold blooded murderer!
Percy also killed wild Bill in cold blood, granted wild Bill was a murderer. Wild Bill was on death row and would have been executed
Percy was overall bratty. But the guards seemed overly harsh on him, considering that he was only assaulting prisoners on death row rather than innocent hospital patients. They should've thought about that a little.
The prisoners are already on death row, that doesn't give Percy the right to assault them
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MissTexasMcCoy — 12 years ago(February 13, 2014 01:41 PM)
I feel the same way you do. People who have not read the book, and have only seen the film, seem to find it much easier to like and feel sorry for Del, and hate Percy. The book describes both characters somewhat differently. In the book, Del is in prison because he raped and murdered a young woman, then tried to hide her body by setting it on fire behind the building she lived in. The building caught on fire and killed six more people, two of which were children. Stephen King describes Percy in the book similarly to the movie, but in the book the impression given is more that Percy is just a cocky, annoying young man who has an abrasive attitude and gets a big head trip out of being in law enforcement. He is a jerk, but the book didn't really make me
hate
him the way the movie tries to. SK also explains that Del's crime is one of the major reasons Percy hated him so much.
For John Coffey to
harm
Percy in the end seemed out of place to me. John was a miracle healer, it was not in his nature to harm anyone or anything.
Some people on this board like to make some sort of an analogy between John Coffey and Jesus Christ, I personally don't buy into that theory. SK isn't really one to go into theology all that much, and he doesn't hint at any such thing in the book. When I first saw this movie, when John grabbed Percy,
I honesly thought at first that John was going to "fix" Percy and turn him into a better person.
I do agree with you, it seemed strange and extreme for Percy to be given the fate he was. I know many people disagree with me on that, but that's just what I think.
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pentacleman — 11 years ago(April 12, 2014 02:21 PM)
Well, bear in mind that Jesus, though a healer and a man of compassion, was also able and willing to draw a hard line against the forces of evil. He grew enraged and ran the moneychangers out of the synagogue, he rebuked Legion and remorselessly cast the demons out of the possessed man, and he snapped at Simon Peter when the latter drew a sword and injured the slave of one of the Romans who had come to arrest Jesus.
So it seems that John Coffey has that side of Jesus in him as well. Most of the time he's like Saint Christopher, gently and compassionately helping those in need. But when he's confronted with a wicked heart like that of Percy or Wild Bill, that's when he turns into Michael the Archangel. Does that make sense? -
TheFatDruidofNacyl — 12 years ago(February 14, 2014 12:30 AM)
In regards to what Del did he did get executed for his crimes. Especially with the sponge not being wet and having a more painful and horrific death. Del did regret what he did and would want to repent for his actions. He even went to his execution knowing it had to be done instead of crying about it or trying to get out of it.
Percy was a cruel and sadistic person that pushed other people around and acted like a spoiled brat just because he had connections. He enjoyed the suffering of others plus the fact he was stupid and cowardly. If he wasn't turned into a vegetable he could have ended up harming himself or another person because of his future actions.
Not only do I think his punishment fits but it is also a kindness. A far greater kindness than John got for being at the wrong place at the wrong time.
I also wonder if he didn't get turned into a vegetable if his family could have helped him get away with murder.
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oilinblood — 12 years ago(March 08, 2014 04:27 AM)
Not sure if OP understands what a psychopath is.
The most interesting thing was Wild Bill attacking Percy. Percy is not very much different from Wild Bill hes just inexperienced. Its not only in the acts by Percy, its the things he saysenough of which were kept for the film as to make it abundantly clear Percy is a psychopath. And as wild bill insinuates through observation, after handling Percy, that Percys freezing during the attempted breakout/strangling was more in part to his interests and his "noodle" than any real want for the situation to end. Percy is just new to italot of psychopaths prefer jobs where they are in charge of others who need assistance. Percy also has a sister whose more powerful than himwhich might also be something.
Basically he is psychopath with a badge. And as wild bill and the guards would agree He is the piss pants pussy of the psychopath world. There is good reason percy goes in the straight jacket and into a padded roomand why his last destination/punishment is to be a vegetable in a mental hospital where likely half the staff have some level of psychopathic thoughts.
I think some people might want to see psychiatrists if they feel percy was mistreated. -
zeeboe82 — 12 years ago(March 27, 2014 09:52 AM)
I reread the book recently, and the script. I've rethought some things and regret what I posted. I can't type that I agree with you about the death penalty or that conservatives have low I.Q's however. Sounds like liberal hogwash.
If prisoners are on death row, I agree with Edgecomb's philosophy on keeping the inmates calm and treating them humanely as long as they obey the rules. They are there to die after all, so punishing them anymore then what is necessary is useless and cruel.
I just feel bad whenever one person is singled out by a group, but Percy was wrong with his choices and didn't belong on the Green Mile.
Paul Edgecomb believed in the death penalty too, but he never allowed his personal opinions to interfere with his duties.
I suspect John Coffey knew something about Percy that the others didn't because in the book he refers to Percy as a "bad man" just like he called Wild Bill a "bad man". In the film, he calls them both "bad men".
Paul Edgecomb however is a very good man. He's tough, but fair. He's a great leader. He didn't put up with any of Wild Bill's nonsense and he allowed Percy to shout "Dead Man Walking!", but I suspect if Paul hadn't told him to stop, who knows how long Percy would have kept shouting. He also stopped Brutal twice from giving Percy a beat down. Paul and the guards also clearly had sympathy for Percy when he wet himself. Brutal even told Del to learn when to shut up after Del laughed at Percy, so they are all good men who don't put up with any nonsense.
They are all good examples of how us men should be - Tough, but compassionate and fair who only resort to violence when it's only the last resort. -
efigalaxie — 11 years ago(April 03, 2015 02:54 PM)
Nothing_Is_Forever
I take great exception to your line of lunacy. A proven fact conservatives have a lower IQ.. Right. How about an idiot that believes anything Obama Says??? How about those that blindly follow ANY politician. Liberals in the classic mode may be as you state. However, those whom call themselves liberals today are mostly hypocrites. Today's liberal believes in free expression - as long as it is acceptable to him.
I am with you on the drug issue. Torture??? My God Man!! These Islamic wackos are busy cutting people's heads off, and you are worried about a little water dribbled up a terrorists nose???
The constitution??? All big government types like shredding that. Most politicians are bought and sold long before gaining national prominence.
Here is a thought. Today's liberals decry loss of liberty at the hand of government while all the time handing government more power. Does that seem very SMART to you??
I have a suggestion. Google 'Frederic Bastiat's The Law.' That little tome is not very long. A literate person can get through it in a couple hours. Mr. Bastiat delineates the only real function of government.
Finally - Get your head out of a categorization's arse and think for yourself. Question your own beliefs. Follow them to their logical conclusions.