Is Mercy a nymphomaniac?
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bizzniss — 9 years ago(April 04, 2016 03:19 AM)
She's a prostitute. If you Listened to the movie, she clearly states it. It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure that out.
Here's one of the many excerpts where they acknowledge it:
Mercy: Friday nights are good. Saturday nights are better.
Swan: I bet you can't even remember who you get on Friday and Saturday night you probably don't remember what they look like
Mercy: Sometimes I can and sometimes I can't who gives a damn?
Also, She wanted Swan AFTER they shared a long passionate kiss, She's been hot for him all night, that's one of the reasons she followed him, the kiss just set it off. Plus it was risky. If the world were about the end, most people would have sex. -
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bizzniss — 9 years ago(April 05, 2016 08:22 AM)
LIKE I SAID IN MY ORIGINAL STATEMENTLISTEN CLEARLY:
"There were many excerpts where they acknowledge it"
, I was just pointing ONE out.
There is another part where Swan says, "I don't like what you do". She say's, "it's a living."
If you can't tell from that, then you are obviously very stupid, unworthy of my time and this conversation is over. -
mobocracy — 9 years ago(April 05, 2016 11:13 AM)
All you're doing is reading between the lines. I never remember a single line that definitively says she does sex work for money.
You second bit of "proof" above doesn't say "what she does" only that she calls it "a living".
Prostitution isn't unreasonable as an assumption, but it's only an assumption. With her character and where she's from, there's a big grey area between prostitution involving sex in exchange for money and promiscuity used as a means of obtaining influence with the gang leadership or for drinks or favors. -
madconceptz2010 — 9 years ago(July 18, 2016 03:48 PM)
Mercy is a prostitute who hangs around with The Orphans but decides to tag along with The Warriors after looking for some real action. She takes a shine to Swan and walks with him on their way to Coney Island. She talks about her life as they walk through a subway tunnel where they share a kiss. Swan instantly regrets this and ditches her. They meet up again right before the fight with The Punks where they make up. On their arrival back to Coney Island she takes off with Swan and the other Warriors.
http://warriorsmovie.co.uk/cast -
Jeromagnus — 9 years ago(August 25, 2016 10:11 PM)
@bizzniss : you know you're insulting people because you're not confident in your argumentation right ? Can't believe Mobocracy replied to you AND didn't return your gratuitous insult. Lucky you.
If your counter argument is that "there [is so] many exerpts where they acknowledge it, I was just poiting ONE out", why don't you point the other ones instead of insulting people ? Answer : cause there are none.
Just watched the movie and noticed absolutely no passage at all that confirm Marcy is a prostitute. Your statement is a personal interpretation and even an assumption wouldn't confirm it but rather that Marcy is nymphomaniac. In the "best case scenario", an extended interpretation would be that Marcy would use sex to gain power, just like Mobocracy suggested. -
kaskait — 9 years ago(August 26, 2016 07:53 AM)
Mercy is a messed up girl, living among the working poor, with no hope. All she had going for her was pretty looks (which the film shows are fading fast), parties and numerous hook ups.
She follows the Warriors because they are different, particularly Swan. By the time the subway scene comes up, she has pinned all her hopes for change on him. All she has to offer him is sex but he wants emotional connection. Something that Mercy can't offer him at that moment.
I find the subway scene where the faded Mercy comes face up with a slumming rich prom girl extremely sad. Swan shows her empathy and it changes her. It was what she needed to start her change.