tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9036104775563265647.post768348513185834976..comments2024-03-25T12:31:58.169+00:00Comments on David Stimpson: A Favourite Scene In The PrisonerDavid Stimpsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15196038086564981619noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9036104775563265647.post-78346462558639727052014-10-23T08:40:14.862+01:002014-10-23T08:40:14.862+01:00Hello Arno,
Thank you for your very kind greet...Hello Arno,<br /> Thank you for your very kind greeting, it is very much appreciated, and it's good to be back, and good to hear hear you as always.<br /> Your comment is very nicely put, and quite right. As viewers we do get involved with the characters. And as for Nadia/Number 8, as a perpetrator, she does know more than Number 6. And like Number 6 at the end, we as the viewer, learn that we cannot believe one single word Nadia utters! She may have seemed to be cosying up to Number 6, and that is why she was there. But deep down, Nadia Rakovsky, if that be her real name, is cold, unfeeling, and calculating!<br /><br />Very best regards<br />David<br />BCNUDavid Stimpsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15196038086564981619noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9036104775563265647.post-15037260260564723652014-10-23T08:24:17.229+01:002014-10-23T08:24:17.229+01:00..."one is willing their escape to be success......"one is willing their escape to be successful." - Yes! That's fundamental to almost any thrilling film scene to work or, as the master of suspense, Alfred Hitchcock, would have it, the viewer needs to be involved with the characters, he needs to be an accomplice of the perpetrator if necessary and in some cases he needs to have more information than the hero. Given all this a scene like this one works despite potential technical or logical flaws in it. - WELL-COME back, David on the blog! - BCNU!nr6dehttp://www.nummer6-theprisoner.denoreply@blogger.com