You can always choose to
-
TheCaretaker237 — 9 years ago(October 27, 2016 02:34 PM)
What? He said it once.
Have you seen Trading Places or Blazing Saddles?
Yeah, maybe the dead twins should have been Sesame Street characters, Ernie and Bert maybe, and each time they appear on screen they do the happy dance. Oh and instead of a brutal Axe murder, Jack simply jumps out, shouts booga booga and tickles him, then they all eat cake and kick back with a coffee.
Why are you playing the race card? Get the beep over it, it's 2016.
"White Mans Burden Lloyd my man, white mans burden" -
adamwallace-32061 — 9 years ago(January 24, 2017 01:51 AM)
Was that really necessary for that scene?
Yes absolutely!
I recently watched the film again after many years, and the scene your talking of really stood out for me. It's Jack pivotal scene in the film, and the power play between the two characters is extraordinary.
When the two enter the toilet Bradie is the submissive waiter and Jack is the patron, but within a couple of lines the roles are reversed. Jack go's from being slightly annoyed about the spill on his jacket, to absolutely terrified when he realises who he is talking with.
and who is he talking with? At first it's Bradie or a projection of him, when the conversation switches, it's the Overlook Hotel; is it pure malevolent evil!
Bradie uses the 'N' word to show complete contempt of any sense of morality that Jack has in defence of the hotel's power to curupt him.