Loved it.


I particularly like discussing what the characters Johnny runs into represent. The cafe girl was the only girl in the movie that Johnny doesn't dominate. Oddly enough, Johnny makes a comment about time when he is in the house with her. He controls all of the other women, but he doesn't control her (time). I have no idea what the other characters are supposed to represent, but I have a feeling that they're representative of at least something. Especially characters like the security guard.

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I'd say there are more characters that Johnny doesn't dominate; like Archie's girlfriend, Maggie. The relation he has with her is quite like the one he has with the café girl; it's gentle, balanced - not at all like the one he has with Sophie or the woman in the window. He does not try to get into Maggie's or the café girl's panties.
I think the only women Johnny likes to dominate are the ones that he thinks are weak; usually the ones who try to make him like them through sexual advances (and as we all know, people who try to charm others through sex appeal are usually very insecure and weak). Johnny also sees the weakness in the woman in the window becuase she's..well, she's just messed up, really. She drinks to dull the pain she obviously feels (for what reasons are unknown, perhaps that she's all alone and getting old?), and Johnny sees this as another sign of weakness.
It's very easy to pinpoint how Johnny dominates the females in this film, because of the sex and all, but if you look closely, you'll see that he tries to dominate some of the men as well. this, of course, does not necessarily mean that the will to dominate them are sexually motivated, seeing as Johnny is most definitely a heterosexual.
Brian the secutiry guard is one of the male characters that he successfully dominates; Johnny demeans him and the way he chooses to live his life, his life philosophy, etc. He makes him feel old and naïve. He tries to dominate Archie and Louise as well, but they seem to be making more of an effort to resist him. Louise resists because she knows better, she's wary because she's been burnt by this guy before - but she feels the need to comply because she feels a great deal of guilt due to something that happened prior to the film's storyline (the enigmatic lines "I thought you never wanted to see me again" and, when asked by Johnny why she doesn't go back to Manchester, she answers "You know why not." illustrate this). Archie resists because he simply does not understand Johnny, he doesn't try to understand him either. In turn, Johnny doesn't seem to understand Archie - there is a complete lack of communication between them, because of their intellectual differences. With lack of communication, the relationship has nowhere to work from.

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