bdc28
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« on: February 27, 2011, 02:41:53 AM » |
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My neighbors' son just got his A+ on his paper on GBU, and I had to send you his ideas. Im paraphrasing because I dont have the paper in front of me, but I had to share this with everyone. Comment if you like but please read..the kid is genius.
"The Good and the Bad, in this movie, represent the opposite ideals of man. Either what we aspire to be, or what we fear the most. THE UGLY, Tuco's character, is not in fact ugly, but IS, the representation of man. Man with nothing to hide behind, his raw nature. Greedy, opportunistic and completely along for the ride with no idea how to get to his destination without taking from others.
Tuco is weak, uncomfortable getting too close to either of the polar representations, but he sticks with the representation of the good because he feels he can easiest manipulate him. Tuco's character is like most people feel, uncomfortable, clumsy, uncommited to anything specific.
Tuco likes to see himself as "The Bad", like many tough guys do. But when faced with the awe of what pure, uncomprimising evil looks like, he cowers and seeks to escape. He finds it much easier, even if never believed by THE GOOD, to represent himself in the middle.
In the end, THE GOOD and THE BAD face off, and man's representation is stuck right in the middle of their conflict. Unarmed, and unprepared. His only grace is that neither force saw him as a real threat to begin with, only as THEIR tool to their means."
Say what you will...some kids are doing their homework.
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"I once shot an elephant in my pajamas. What he was doing wearing my pajamas I have no idea..."
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KC
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« Reply #5 on: November 01, 2012, 07:23:30 AM » |
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Matt
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« Reply #6 on: March 20, 2016, 10:17:24 AM » |
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First of all, he deserves an A+ for choosing such a great movie to write his paper on, and finding new ways to dissect it and look at the characters. I'd be interested in reading the whole paper too. And the A+ stands, but I would say in a discussion thread about some of what was in that paper, I would at least want to disagree with some if it, without being disrespectful. It's about Tuco being cowardly and weak: Tuco is weak, uncomfortable getting too close to either of the polar representations, but he sticks with the representation of the good because he feels he can easiest manipulate him. Tuco's character is like most people feel, uncomfortable, clumsy, uncommited to anything specific.
Tuco likes to see himself as "The Bad", like many tough guys do. But when faced with the awe of what pure, uncomprimising evil looks like, he cowers and seeks to escape. He finds it much easier, even if never believed by THE GOOD, to represent himself in the middle.
Tuco is comedic, and over-the-top, so I think we have a tendency to think he'd be all bravado, and a coward at heart. But, that's not at all the case. Tuco is a bad-ass. It's true. He's tough through and through. He doesn't have a death-wish. He's not cool and calm, like The Good or The Bad. He's a little crazy. I've said recently in another thread if they didn't call him Ugly, they could have called him The Crazy. A Korean version calls the third man "Weird".. "The Good, The Bad, The Weird". Tuco puts on his gun, says to Blondie... six men? No problem, I'll kill them -- I'll be back" (Slight paraphrase) and off he goes, happy to go alone, to take out all of Sentenza's men. He only doesn't go alone because Blondie decides he could use the help. I also don't think he sticks with Blondie because he's easiest to manipulate. He's in the partnership for the money. It's all about the gold, or the reward money. I do agree that he seems clumsy (his weirdness), but he's not that clumsy.... it's more about his oddity than any physical clumsiness... he is sharp with that pistol... "When you gotta shoot, shoot, don't talk." So again, respect for looking outside the box, and a great paper... but I think Tuco is just a little strange, but definitely not a fearful man who looks for weak people to manipulate.
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