"Look, but don't touch. Touch, but don't taste. Taste, but don't swallow."
Affleck’s Lee is numb, frozen. He walks toward the door, stops, and then—without a word—grabs a policeman’s gun and tries to shoot himself in the head. Indian hot rape scenes
The power of this scene is the failure of language. No apology is adequate. No punishment fits the crime. Lee’s attempt at suicide is the only logical response to his grief. The scene is unbearably tense because we realize that law and order have no answer for a broken soul. It is a silent scream that echoes louder than any explosion. Paul Thomas Anderson’s There Will Be Blood ends with a scene of operatic, absurd violence. Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day-Lewis) has murdered Eli Sunday (Paul Dano) with a bowling pin. But before the killing, there is the monologue. "Look, but don't touch
He pulls a gold pin from his lapel. "This pin. Two people. This is gold. Two more. He would have given me two for it. At least one. One more person." He walks toward the door, stops, and then—without
The essay isn’t about the whale or Ahab; it’s about the author’s own sadness. As Ellie reads the words, Charlie gets to his feet—a physical miracle that seems impossible. He walks toward her, toward the light, tears streaming down his face.
"I have a competition in me," Plainview growls. "I want no one else to succeed."
As Theo walks down the stairs, clutching the crying infant, the soldiers on both sides stop shooting. They cross themselves. They whisper. For thirty seconds, there is total silence amidst the chaos.