MovieChat Forums > The Hit (1985) Discussion > Question with ***SPOILERS***

Question with ***SPOILERS***


I like this film but I don't understand why he doesn't kill the girl? He has so many opportunities, not to mention reasons, e.g. when she bites his hand in the car. She's a problem and a liability for him throughout the entire movie. He's a professional hitman. Why does he keep sparing her life?

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That's a good question. He certainly wants to, but I think the problem he has is that she's so innocent and pure. Unlike Willie, she didn't betray her friends and unlike Myron she doesn't hurt people for the thrill of it. Myron keeps asking for Mr. Braddock to save her, but in the end he gives up because "it's a job".

What's interesting is that if he had killed her, he probably would have gotten away with everything and made it through as a backpacking Parisian.

They're funny people, the Italians. Culture really isn't their thing.

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He intended on killing her, but the fight she put up at the end gained his admiration. "You're a very luck girl," he says after he he knocked her unconscious.

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According to John Hurt in the Criterion commentary track, his character "falls" for the girl on a subconscience level that even he doesn't realize. But he does begin to admire her in the third act.


D.

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I don't remember that he said "subconsciously". He says it wasn't suggested in the script, but he decided to interpret the character's behavior that way, because it seemed like the only logical explanation. He says that the character is in love and hence "doesn't know what he's doing", which doesn't mean that it's subconscious, but that he isn't behaving "rationally" any longer. It may certainly be a novel feeling for him and hence he doesn't quite know how to deal with it, certainly also fights it because it gets in the way (even to the point of endangering his life), but that isn't the same as being unaware of it. In fact, once you realize this yourself (personally I suspected it upon first watching the film, but wasn't sure whether it was my wishful thinking :-)) and watch the film again, there are many hints at what is going with him, and much sooner than the third act.

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Q: Why doesn't he kill the girl?

A: Because he is mesmerized by her bOObz. Aren't we all?

I beseech ye in the bowels of Christ, think that ye may be mistaken.

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Probably much of what's above in others' comments, plus...

1. It wasn't what he was hired for.
2. He'd already killed or let Myron kill enough "civilians."
3. Riordan had probably ordered him to keep a low profile. That bomb had upended that, and his other efforts to keep the body count down had failed. E.g. the older guy in the apartment whom he spared only to find he was gonna rat on him.
4. He probably regretted taking her along, possibly because, as said by "daiderdraco" above, he was attracted to her physically and emotionally. Bringing her was his mistake, not hers.

Yeah, ironic that if he'd killed her, he'd have lived. A moment of weakness, or mercy, was his undoing.

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