Uhh.... Is it fifteen years ago? I'm confused.
Factually incorrect, I'm afraid. Doe's victims committed religious, not civic, crimes (the prostitute aside), and Paltrow was totally innocent so far as we know, apart from contemplating an abortion, which Doe had no knowledge of. He says so himself: his sin is envy, making himself as bad as his victims. Mills killed in the heat of passion, in a state of temporary insanity. From a Catholic position, there may not be much difference, but...By shooting Doe, Mills degraded himself, and reduced himself to Doe's level.
Well, he was still in shock, and understandably so. But, be honest: do you think the character Mills would ever regret killing Doe? I very much doubt it. Somerset would indeed have preferred to see Doe proved wrong/locked up, thereby aiding his own peace of mind, but I think that Mills would actually take comfort in his action during his recovery. Unlike Somerset, he's not a philosopher, he's more of a righteous cowboy, and I don't think the confrontation would have changed that.Tracy was still dead, and, looking at his face afterward, it seemed clear to me that Mills himself derived no satisfaction from what he had done.
That's my whole point and the poetic part about it. By having Freeman kill Doe, Doe loses. He doesn't get what he wants.I disagree,. The ending we got was better. The last killing was meant to be a manifestation of wrath. In order for that manifestation to occur it had to be someone who was truly emotional, and Pitt was reacting to what Doe had done to his wife. In this alternate ending, it would no longer be wrath really (unless wrath was now a pussy sin) because Freeman would be reacting to Pitt reacting to what Doe did.
Actually you should realize what Doe's plan is when you find out Paltrow's head is in the box. It's pretty obvious at that point. I really don't see how the movie loses it's impact if Doe loses. It's poetic justice. I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree.Uh.. the movie would lose its impact if Doe loses.
Even more to the point, you don't realize what the last two murders were, particularly the last one, until after it happens. You realize only after Mills shoots that "wrath" was truly being depicted in that act.
Your suggestion (no offense) would castrate the film
Sorry! My mistake. I thought that this was a Star Trek board - you know, that franchise launched in 1966, which produced most of its content to date before 1997? Apologies, Rear Admiral, won't happen again. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going out to torch my Complete Works of Shakespeare in the backyard, because that book's centuries old, and who has time for that s#!t?"Ebert and the ending to Seven"
And welcome to 1997.
WTF is this about?
Factually incorrect, I'm afraid. Doe's victims committed religious, not civic, crimes (the prostitute aside), and Paltrow was totally innocent so far as we know, apart from contemplating an abortion, which Doe had no knowledge of. He says so himself: his sin is envy, making himself as bad as his victims. Mills killed in the heat of passion, in a state of temporary insanity. From a Catholic position, there may not be much difference, but...
Of course not. If Doe were to by some miracle be acquitted by a jury, and Mills were to track him down and murder him, that'd be premeditated murder, no question.You seem to be arguing that a murderer cannot be murdered
Well, a defense lawyer would certainly argue temporary insanity, and the very definition of "absolute alienation of reason" is "great emotional duress". According to the first definition I could find:Mills committed murder. What he did wasn't even voluntary manslaughter. While Mills was certainly subjected to extreme provocation, for his act to qualify as voluntary manslaughter, he would have had to carry it out "on impulse and without reflection." .... While he was clearly under great emotional duress, I didn't see any evidence of the "absolute alienation of reason" that constitutes legal insanity.
So, as a juror, I'd probably go for "manslaughter", but given the choice between "guilty of first-degree murder" and "not guilty", provided the judge approved consideration of temporary insanity, I'd go "not guilty". Now, as noted above, Mills would get a pardon anyway, which I'd probably endorse, though he should certainly never be a cop again.mental derangement at the time of an abrupt crime, such as a sudden attack or crime of passion, can be a valid defense, or at least show lack of premeditation to reduce the degree of the crime.
Agreed. I think our core difference rests on whether or not he was temporarily insane. "Premeditated" first-degree murder, as I understand it, does not mean "decided one moment, and acted the very next." It means "decided one moment, and then drove to/the next day/paid someone else to/etc."I can't excuse it, or say it wasn't wrong, or that it doesn't matter. It was wrong, and it does matter.
Well, I'm not 100% sold on my own idea either. But I don't see Mills as "destroyed" by his own tragic flaw. For one thing, he wasn't Catholic, and didn't accept Doe's assessment of the vileness of humanity in the first place, so he'd see Doe's death as, at worst, two totally different and wildly unequal wrongs making for settled justice, and therefore forgive himself. Doe and Somerset may be basically agreed about humanity's rottenness, but I don't think Mills would agree even in time. Yes, he'd be traumatized by grief, not regret, but he'd recover. I think that's what Ebert meant by "too easy". Seven is a noir film, and noirs don't end happily. Neither does Seven, of course, but Ebert's saying that the setup would have justified an even bleaker ending.Finally, on the issue of suicide: I think that, dramatically, that would have been gratuitous and anticlimactic. The central conflict in Seven was the conflict between the detectives and the killer: when Mills shot Doe, that conflict was resolved. The most important subsidiary conflict--Mills vs himself--was also resolved: Mills was destroyed by his tragic flaw.
Hope you don't still think that I'm deeply morally corrupt.![]()
"Ebert and the ending to Seven"
And welcome to 1997.
WTF is this about?
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