Why the ending was disappointing
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snorkelzombie — 13 years ago(March 05, 2013 07:32 AM)
yeah, the ending was a failure for me. if i were to rewrite this, i'd have it that the tunnel won't be discovered that soon, the bomb will not be discovered and the city hall will blow up, clyde will be tried for killing all those people but nick wouldn't have as much evidence to convict him (maybe there's a way to negate his confessions - will have to research on this), anyhoo, clyde goes free and will tell nick " it's not what you know, it's what you can prove" so nick will realize how beep up the justice system is, and finally, clyde will tell nick how he did the killings using the tunnel and everything and nick will be left looking like idiot. that's how i like it. ciao!
kill all my demons, you might kill all my angles, too. -
quocbuu — 12 years ago(April 30, 2013 10:01 PM)
I saw this film some years ago on a fly from Frankfurt to Hong Kong. Did not notice the film really well, until yesterday i saw it again. The film is really good from the first moment until the last some minutes. In the film they told Clyde is somebody who has a super brain with at least 200 iQ. But how can he oversee - or not recognize - that somebody has break into his garage forcibly ?!? I think if, the director let Clyde expecting Nice Rice is awaiting him in his prison cell . And with his IQ over 200 ":-))" , he would know that the bomb is in his cell and activated the bomb intentionally. And went into the second exit which he has prepare to survive the explosion. In this case, it token the super intelligent Clyde as the film show the whole time.
And maybe we have the chance to see.. to be continued
And the worst things in the film, that nothing happen Nick Rice. I doesn't gratification the feeling of the audience, but it show the reality !!!!!
Music, Cinematography of the film is wonderful.
Gerard Butler is an excellent actor in this film. Christoph Waltz copied the way of conversation and action from Butler, from the scene he shaw Clyde torture the killer of his family, i think ! -
arkast — 12 years ago(May 01, 2013 02:42 PM)
He didn't have time to notice if the garage door was broken into forcibly.
Well yes, the ending was pretty bad to be honest aside from all the holes that are plausible to be there.
Fox's character didn't really seem to develop that well and nothing really changed with that ending.
The way people saw it is that, one terrorist controling their city for a few days.
They didn't notice if the justice system was flawed or not righteous. How could they?
Also, isn't Fox a little worried if he is gonna be accused or anything? A bomb just appeared into a cell, in which there was a possible murdered of him or his family? That's motive. -
don-woodring32 — 12 years ago(June 15, 2013 11:44 AM)
I really like this movie, but I agree with you and I am disappointed in the ending as well. Clyde worked for 10 years to "teach" the legal system that they cannot make deals with murderers. Nick did not understand how or why Clyde was so hurt by the deal he made with the murderer and rapist of his wife and daughter. However, when Nick's family was sent a DVD with the killing of one of the murderers being tortured and killed, he became enraged and vengeful. Nick caused the death of Clyde because Clyde was not satisfied that the legal system understood why making deals with murderers was so wrong. Nick became what Clyde was and as a viewer, I wanted Nick to be the "good guy" when it was all said and done. Instead, he justified breaking the law (breaking and entering, putting a bomb in Clyde's cell) because it was important to stop Clyde. If he instead, Nick saved Clyde from himself at the end, the viewer would have sympathized with Nick. If at the end, Nick would have shown Clyde the disarmed bomb, it would have been easier to look at Nick as the hero instead of a self centered hypocritical lawyer more concerned with winning then justice. I think that most people who watched the movie were cheering for Clyde to get revenge on the harm done to his family. At the end, Nick "killed" Clyde who everyone related to as the man that was getting justice for the murder and rape of his family.
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sevenof9fl — 12 years ago(June 15, 2013 02:15 PM)
I had not seen the movie until today and was under the incorrect impression that they both died in the end, which I thought they both paid for their errors. Of course that turned out to be wrong.
Having said that though, I think the only saving grace for Nick is that he did say in the last scene that he knew he made a mistake by making deals with killers ("I don't make any more deals with murderers" or words to that effect) so he does see the error of his ways.
Clyde however, had a whole different agenda, killing innocent people who were just trying to do their jobs to the best of their ability with their hearts in the right place. They were not what Nick had become: jaded and all about "clearing cases and 'winning' statistics." And Clyde was never going to stop. As the one character said "the only way you'll stop him is by putting a board through his head."
It was a sad ending and Nick and the others took the law into their own hands, sorta left a bad taste in my own mouth but if Clyde wasn't ever going to stop, they had no choice. He pretty much went insane.
"As the Philosopher Jagger said, you can't always get what you want." -
noone1647 — 11 years ago(May 20, 2014 03:43 AM)
Well I thought maybe the point was, at the end, the last thing Rice, now the DA, says to Clyde is, "I no longer make deals with murderers" (paraphrasing because I do not remember the exact quote). So Clyde DID accomplish his goal of changing the system. It cost him his own life to do it, but he did it.
His goal was not to let cold-blooded murderers off with lame "deals". Justice. -
jostockjessica — 11 years ago(May 31, 2014 06:26 PM)
I think you missed the point a tad.
He might have ended up as something different. Or ended up as something quote on quote bad, but he never became what he hated.
He hated men who brutally killed his family for no reason. He always had a reason. Flawed or not, it wasn't senseless. -
senseihEnRY — 11 years ago(June 13, 2014 06:50 PM)
Nick is clearly change at the end of the movie, he'll never make a deal with murderer anymore. Still, i agree that the ending is not as satisfying as the rest of the movie. It would be more awesome if they pull the Se7en ending with this movie. Would it be more awesome for Clyde to put two bombs, one on Nick's family location and one on the City Hall and then let Nick choose. Of course Nick is gonna save his family and that means, Clyde win.
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kcott44 — 11 years ago(August 08, 2014 10:25 AM)
In my view, Clyde became what he hated on purpose. See, that was the whole point of his plan. I love the fact that Clyde wins at the end, many people think the opposite and that it was a clichd Hollywood ending but it was not. Clyde wanted Nick to catch him at the end and change his ways. Clyde wins because not only did he kill pretty much everyone involved in the original case except Nick but Nick has to feel that guilt for the rest of his life. Nick has to live with his wrong decision and he probably changed his ways. I seem the be the only one who truly loves the ending and love the film overall even though it has a high score on IMDB.
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Rogueblue00 — 11 years ago(August 08, 2014 04:05 PM)
In my view, Clyde became what he hated on purpose. See, that was the whole point of his plan. I love the fact that Clyde wins at the end, many people think the opposite and that it was a clichd Hollywood ending but it was not. Clyde wanted Nick to catch him at the end and change his ways. Clyde wins because not only did he kill pretty much everyone involved in the original case except Nick but Nick has to feel that guilt for the rest of his life. Nick has to live with his wrong decision and he probably changed his ways. I seem the be the only one who truly loves the ending and love the film overall even though it has a high score on IMDB.
Totally agree with you. Such a shame that Nick died. I was hoping for him to live and as to go through the court case and not get the justice which he really should of had was a complete shock. Not only that but this is a good example of how justice is given to similar cases, such as this. -
Abuhin — 11 years ago(August 10, 2014 10:52 AM)
In my view, Clyde became what he hated on purpose.
Yes! So glad I'm not the only one who saw that. Everyone's like, "Oh, he's just being cruel because he's crazy!" and "See how he laughs? He's just become a guy who gets off on murder, too!" Clyde's only pulling his axe-crazy, smilin'-psycho act when others, particularly Nick, are watching. When he's alone in his solitary cell, (after stabbing cellmate, before car bombs go off) he's sulking on the verge of tears. He's practically praying for Nick to wise up so he doesn't have to kill anymore.
I love the fact that Clyde wins at the end, many people think the opposite and that it was a clichd Hollywood ending but it was not. Clyde wanted Nick to catch him at the end and change his ways
Yeah, I see it like Heath Ledger's Joker from Dark Knight. "I took Gotham's White Knight, and I brought him down to our level." Getting Nick to break the rules he claims to support so much is technically a moral win for Clyde.