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Okay, I finally watched this movie tonight on DVD (with TWT sitting behind me COACHING ME THROUGH THE WHOLE THING! "Did you see that, Mom? Don't miss this part, Mom. Don't blink now, Mom....." LOL!)
Anyway, I've read this entire thread (after seeing the movie, all 11 pages of this thread!), and I have one comment that absolutely NO ONE here has mentioned, and I think it is the reason why the film had to be made the way it was.
It was not made back to front as a gimmick. It was necessary.
How do I know this? Think a moment. What is Leonard's condition? He has no short-term memory.
How is the movie presented to us? With no short-term memory. Because we see a scene's conclusion without its beginning or reason-for-being, we live this movie the way Leonard lives life.
Otherwise, everything Leonard does would seem just about as stupid as it is. For instance, the scene in Dodd's bathroom. Watching it the first time, we naturally assume that it is Leonard's bathroom, and so we don't snicker and laugh when he takes a shower.
Once the scene hops backwards, and we see it's Dodd's room, then Leonard seems silly. He would be seen as some poor schmoe bumbling through his life doing things for no good reason. But, without this knowledge, we as the audience are left with no short-term memory of why Leonard does things ("short-term memory" in our case being "the previous scene" in a regular chronological timeline).
And because we don't QUITE know why something is happening to Leonard at any given moment, the things he does and believes in the present make sense to us too.
Am I making sense?
Anyway, my point is that the brilliance of this "device" is that it presents Leonard's life as he himself lives it -- piecing parts together and trying to make sense of the present without having any past reference point at all.
Hope that makes sense.
Linda
Last edited by Austruck; 04-27-02 at 01:05 AM.