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'Martyrs' ending explained: 'Keep doubting' is the key. UPDATED


Anna knows, just like the viewer knows, that discovering the existence of the afterlife is Mademoiselle's life work, so important to her and the cult that they are willing to do anything.

The beauty of the movie (which some viewers have completely missed), is that when Anna whispers to Mademoiselle, we think Mademoiselle wins. We think Mademoiselle gets what she wants. We think Mademoiselle is going to tell the glorious news to the gathering cult. And we think Anna has been reduced to nothing more than a used, mindless, unthinking tool.

But then comes the twist: "Keep doubting...bang!"

And we realize we were wrong, as the director Pascal Laugier explains: "the real point of everything is revealed only in the final seconds of the movie. For me, that was the exciting part of the project."

Anna purposely lied to Mademoiselle and said there was no afterlife, she saw nothing. Anna was the first to speak, and what she spoke convinced Mademoiselle that there was nothing, that her entire life was a futile, evil quest for nothing. Mademoiselle gave up, overcome with guilt and worthlessness, and killed herself. But not before giving a final warning to her friend Ettiene: "Keep doubting (because if you don't, like I didn't, you're gonna end up destroyed like me): Bang!"

It is the one and only thing that Anna could do that would destroy Mademoiselle. Despite her pain throughout the ruined shell of her body, she retained enough strength and humanity in her mind to use the one and only chance she had. With a simple whisper she destroyed her captors, finally avenged her friend, and saved countless girls from falling into the same fate.

Why Martyrs works is that we the audience don't know it happens, can't even fathom it could happen, until the shocking reveal forces us to question all of our previous mistaken notions. We can then reflect upon the foreshadowing in the very beginning of the movie, when young Anna tells the doctors she knows she is there to help Lucie, and to find the bad people who hurt her. When we realize that beaten, barely alive skinned creature was not only willing but able to defeat her captor, that is what makes Martyrs great. It is this unexpected display of strength, loyalty, endurance and sacrifice of Anna, a martyr defined, that elevates the movie to a level far above the horror genre. Anna transcends, and thus Martyrs transcends.

How Martyrs tricks us into the false belief that Mademoiselle and the cult won:

1) The gathering cult leads the viewer to believe there is an incoming victory speech.

2) The conversation between Mademoiselle and Etienne, specifically about getting an answer, getting a clear answer, but still actually the wrong answer.

3) Similar appearing emotional expressions of relief/dejection in Mademoiselles reaction to what Anna said. This distinct lack of sentiment shown by Mademoiselle is not only the key to understanding why she wouldn't "greedily" kill herself to reach the afterlife, but is also why many viewers are confused about her defeat. To someone who doesn't understand psychology, she doesn't seem to be acting suicidal or overtly depressed. And that makes the suicide so much more shocking for the viewer. But apparently it totally confuses some viewers into completely missing the twist that Anna lied, even with the warning of "keep doubting". Mademoiselle is cold, calculating and emotionless, she kills herself with the same lack of emotion as she tortures and kills others. She is a cult-member, and the entirety of that cults existence is finding an answer. Find the wrong answer, and the will to live is simply removed, that awareness is what empowered Anna to endure hell. She told Mademoiselle there was nothing, and Mademoiselle ends her wasted life with the same methodical detachment as she ended the lives of others. That is the truly evil villain the director has given us, not some megalomaniacal comic book character.

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I've often wondered if it is merely as simple as Anna told the truth on what she saw, and she saw the truth. I wonder if the point is that the truth is beyond our understanding and we are as of yet too young in spirit to know what lies beyond death for us... Madame & the cult's actions would be proof of that.

Maybe it was the point that by Martyr-ing herself Anna was able to ascend to a point of devine understanding, something Madame and the others would be unable to do becaue of the sins they allow themselves to become guilty of in their quest to answer their questions. What a twist, to think that all the efforts Madame and the cult put in to their quest were in fact the very reasons they would never see or understand the answers for themselves. I think it is a lot more likely (when you think of the power of metaphor and symbolism in the film - not to mention how it challenges the line between right and wrong) that the point was actually that Anna was an innocent, Martyred by something more powerful and unimaginable than madame and her cult, to bring a message to the cult that would be the beginning of their demise.

I don't think the film makes such a point of the torture and physical extremeties Anna suffers for the sake of her HUMANITY winning out, I think it goes as far as it does to impress on the audience that it takes something devine to combat the evil in humanity.

Maybe it's just me, but it is worth thinking on.

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the point was actually that Anna was an innocent, Martyred by something more powerful and unimaginable than madame and her cult, to bring a message to the cult that would be the beginning of their demise.


The only thing that would destroy them is despair, the only way to achieve that is to make M believe her goals were impossible, her quest irrelevant. The director knows that, thus the character understands it: Anna lied.

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[deleted]

I tend to agree with the OP; I thought Anna was seeking vengeance by purposely lying to Ms. (Afterall, does Anna not see a somewhat heavenly looking otherworld with blue backdrop and a white light? Very similar to my own NDE, FWIW). If Anna told her the truth, then I highly doubt Ms. Afterlife Obsessed would go kill herself; I mean she MUST believe in a heaven and hell- especially after being told that an afterlife exists... if anything, she would spend the rest of her days on Earth trying to redeem the stuff she did/paid ppl to do to all of those girls- result to anything BUT selfish acts. The way she looked and talked right before shooting herself seemed a tad morose.. possibly even "defeated?" It seems the most logical conclusion- and telling her friend to "keep doubting," I don't think she'd say that in order to trick him, but to concede with his beliefs.

I think the directors aimed to give the audience a somewhat hopeful ending after putting them through nearly 2 hours of misery: Retribution, plain and simple.


Look at how happy you are, so carefree. It's almost as if you don't know you're Billy Bush!-Triumph

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I tend to agree with the OP; I thought Anna was seeking vengeance by purposely lying to Ms.

If Anna told her the truth, then I highly doubt Ms. Afterlife Obsessed would go kill herself; I mean she MUST believe in a heaven and hell- especially after being told that an afterlife exists... if anything, she would spend the rest of her days on Earth trying to redeem the stuff she did/paid ppl to do to all of those girls- result to anything BUT selfish acts.

The way she looked and talked right before shooting herself seemed a tad morose.. possibly even "defeated?" It seems the most logical conclusion- and telling her friend to "keep doubting," I don't think she'd say that in order to trick him, but to concede with his beliefs.


Well said.

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what really bothers me about this cult is this.
they want to know what happens after death right ?
but do they really think they could enter some sort of heaven after all they have done ? maybe she killed herself because she realized that shes going to hell.
it sounds kinda childish i know. they said anna talked for a while. it doesnt take that long just to say "theres no afterlife"

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but do they really think they could enter some sort of heaven after all they have done ?


Many religious people do horrible things and think that they'll get into paradise. They probably convinced themselves that the ends justify the means.

they said anna talked for a while.


They did?

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You guys are viewing the "afterlife" in some pretty narrow Heaven/Hell terms.


"God Hates Us All"

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There is some substance to this theory and I, for one, appreciate the thought put into it. I still find the ending to be open for interpretation to viewers. The "problem" I have with your theory is the look of Mademoiselle as Anna was giving her testimony. Mademoiselle had a look of someone gaining intense knowledge.
"Keep doubting" is indeed the clue...but we do not know what she is referring to in this statement. Is the person she speaking to one that has reservations within the cult on the absolute truth behind the visions?
Why would she say "keep doubting" to a believer?

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Mademoiselle had a look of someone gaining intense knowledge.


Or intense failure.

Why would she say "keep doubting" to a believer?


"Keep doubting that an afterlife exists, because if you keep believing it, seeking it, you will end up JUST LIKE ME!" *bang*

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The trouble with this interpretation is that it buys into the idea that Anna should "get revenge" on the cult or "win" at the end of the film. It's understandable that people feel this way, having seen some of the atrocities they've committed in pursuit of their goal, but I think it kind of misses the point.

Lucie went after her old tormentors because getting revenge was all she could think about, and it ultimately destroyed her - that's why her "demon" kept attacking her even after she'd killed them, because that's what anger and vengeance does to you. It was different for Anna - the turning point of the film is when she remembers (or imagines) a conversation with Lucie where she tells her to "let yourself go" and stop being afraid. Anna achieves this herself, and thus stops struggling when she's subjected to further abuse and torture. Why? Because from that point on, it doesn't matter - she's liberated herself, mentally and emotionally, and she's basically in a place where they can't hurt her any more. By the end of the film she's not thinking about revenge, because she's risen above it.

I like to think that perhaps this was the realization that Mademoiselle comes to at the end - that in the "transfigured" state they'd pushed Anna to, the cult and their petty quest for answers were ultimately meaningless.

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her "demon" kept attacking her even after she'd killed them, because that's what anger and vengeance does


Nope, that's what guilt does.

By the end of the film she's not thinking about revenge, she's risen above it


Nope, what she's risen above was the suffering, in order to sacrifice herself, get revenge for her friend, and save countless others from their fate.

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Nope, that's what guilt does.
Guilt played its part, as did anger and fear (presumably). But that was because Lucie was "only a victim" (as Mademoiselle put it) and she behaved like a victim - consumed by a desire for revenge, operating on the misguided belief that killing her abusers would bring her peace and lay to rest the spectre of the woman she left to die. Hence, "They're dead. They won't hurt you anymore."

Of course it didn't work out that way, because feeding her desire for vengeance didn't help her at all - the spectre kept on driving her to mutilate herself, and Lucie finally decided the only way she'd find any peace was to off herself with a utility knife. The message there seems pretty clear: revenge ain't worth it.

Nope, what she's risen above was the suffering, in order to sacrifice herself, get revenge for her friend, and save countless others from their fate.
Well, one interpretation's as good as another. But it seems to me that when people stick to this idea that Anna exacted some machiavellian "revenge" on Mademoiselle, they're really just trying to salvage a happy ending from a film that doesn't have one (or, for that matter, need one).

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it didn't work out that way, because feeding her desire for vengeance didn't help her at all - the spectre kept on driving her to mutilate herself, and Lucie finally decided the only way she'd find any peace was to off herself with a utility knife. The message there seems pretty clear: revenge ain't worth it.


There was a message in Lucies suicide, but it was from the director, to the audience, and it was a false one: Lucie killed the wrong people. That was twist #1. And this was twist #2:

Well, one interpretation's as good as another. But it seems to me that when people stick to this idea that Anna exacted some machiavellian "revenge" on Mademoiselle, they're really just trying to salvage a happy ending from a film that doesn't have one (or, for that matter, need one).


Well it seems to me that when people stick to the idea that Anna did not lie to Mademoiselle, they're really just forcing the message that director wanted them to believe, pre-twist only - Anna being a useless, hopeless vessel - into an ultimate explanation.



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[deleted]

Mademouiselle would blow her brains out just because Anna whispered that she haven't seen anything?


That's what suicide is, giving up

How do you think would Etienne and the Cult interpret it when they'd find her dead body?


Exactly how Mademoiselle intended; a message of failure, a warning to keep doubting.

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So IF Ana would´ve said "It's beautiful there, it's all true", you're saying Madame wouldn't hurry up to take her life and see it?

Lol. Classic clueless submachine. We all know how much you love your lame theory, which doesn't hold up against the most basic behavioral analysis. The Madame's life goal was to find out if the afterlife exists, by any means necessary. If Ana would've told her "Nothing is there", why would "giving up" mean suicide? Just because it suits your lame theory? Hilarious :)



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So IF Ana would´ve said "It's beautiful there, it's all true", you're saying Madame wouldn't hurry up to take her life and see it?


Did you see the movie? Go watch it again, you missed the entire part about the gathering cult u dolt!

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What's up with the gathering cult? They gathered to find out whether it's a yes or a no. I agree that Ana won, but NOT BECAUSE SHE SAID THERE'S NOTHING, it's exactly the other way around. She lured Madame into hell, and did it finely at that.

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They gathered to find out whether it's a yes or a no.


No, they gathered to find out whether it's a yes or a no from Mademoiselle. That's the part you keep missing. And missing. And missing.

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AND????????????????? So instead of revealing the truth to the cult, you're saying that after torturing women with unthinkable tools, she would give a flying FVCK about how the CULT feels about it? Wow. You're thicker than I thought. And thicker. And thicker.

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after torturing women with unthinkable tools, she would give a flying FVCK about how the CULT feels about it?


The cult is her lifes work, dummy, what they did, they did together.



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My goodness, submachine! Do you realize how pathetically obsessed and overbearing you come across, as if your life depended on everyone agreeing with your theory? Yes, you own the sole valid interpretation of this open-ended film... Geesh. Talk about arrogant zeal. Are you related to user lyndsay_lane or is that an alt name you use to push your fixation? Same obsession and language... Very strange.

I don't fully agree with your assessment and I do have a few issues with your rigid stance in the face of what amounts to little more than speculation-based inference (never a solid argument), but, quite frankly, putting in my 2 cents isn't worth having to deal with your peculiar fanaticism, I feel, beyond calling your attention to it.
Good luck with your life's mission. Guess I'll know where to find you 5 years from now... still on the Martyr's board, no doubt.

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I've made four posts in the last six months, the only one obsessed is you, about me. Now bump my thread again, puppet, so everyone can learn what the ending of the movie means.

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Thank you. Your reply confirms the suspicion I'd developed after skimming through your posts on this thread, though it only took a quick glance at your posting pattern and behaviour to validate my doubts: a sneaky SPAMMER is what you are.

Some of your provocation tactics are a tad too obvious, albeit your restraint is tuned just right; after all, troll too hard and abuse too rudely and you may lose some links, and a cursing fool is not a good image for MovieGoers.com!
Last free bump from me.

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[deleted]

Here's the real ending of Marytrs explained:

- the filmmakers were hacks who had no ending, but they knew if they put up something vague and pretentious, people - like all of us on this board - would fall all over ourselves trying to impose "meaning" on it.

This movie is no different than some phony "artist" taking half an hour to glue a few bolts together and waiting for people to say "Oh, this is an existential statement on man's relation to machine" or "No, it's sybolic of the interconnectedness of all things imposed against a stark reality" blah-de-blah, wank-wank-wank.

That's what makes this movie so bad -- it's so reliant on absolute horsh*t. And - largely because it's French - people are afraid to call it out on its pretentiousness.

The whole basis of the cult is idiotic in the first place: they can't learn about the afterlife from people who haven't died. They torture people to near the point of death... but, they're still not dead, so they're still not in a position to give them the info they're seeking. It's like I drive you to the city limits of Albequerque but let you go no farther, then ask you to write me a report on what their capital building is like.

The whole basis for the torture is stupidity on its face, and it's implausible that such an organized cult would ever form around an idea with such an obvious flaw.

The filmmakers themselves have no idea what Anna said. They counted on the viewers to assume that it was something deep and profound. The filmmakers themselves have no idea why the Madamoiselle killed herself afterward -- they knew that'd be widely open to interpretation and, again, counted on you to IMPOSE a depth on their pointless shlock that the movie itself didn't have.

And, you've obliged.

There is no strength displayed, there is no "transcendence"... there's just a bunch of vagueness laid out so people can pretend it "means" something.

I mean, you have a nice interpretation there, but that's all it is, because the film itself has nothing to say. You've come up with something better than anything the movie provided. The filmakers owe you.

I truly hate this movie, and it's not because it's gory (I'm fine with that) and it's not because it's torture porn (not my favorite thing but I can hang with it if there's some point)... it's that it's so stupid and so reliant on us to impose a greatness upon it that the filmmakers lacked the talent and vision to put on it themselves. Instead of having a point, they just flung their arms wide and said "Impose profundity on me!" A door left open is as good as real "vision" to a pretentious hack.


This movie is no more than a bunch of cheap tactics nicely filmed. And it's probably the most completely overrated movie in horror history. I'm still bewildered that people don't see through the scam that this movie is. I've seldom been more disappointed in a film. It looks nice, it's well made as far as filmmaking and acting and special effect go, but beyond that it's one massive nothing.

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zwolf , you are so right. Kudos to you sir.:)

"Stalingrad. . . The fall of Stalingrad was the end of Europe. There's been a cataclysm."

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[deleted]

Other films that dont spell out the ending and in some cases,leave alot to viewer interpretation... which according to your reasoning, means they suck:

Mulholland Drive
Donnie Darko


Shame on you, dummy.

Donnie Darko explained: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0246578/board/inline/154338744

Mulholland Drive explained: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0166924/board/inline/39598763

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How stupid. There is hardly a shred of any substantive, relevant critique here. You don't like it....fine, but your take on such a widely beleived brilliant film is whats pretentious.


So says The Goats!

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But Anna did see Albequerque. We saw her seeing it, with all that CGI stuff. So I think you have to assume the movie's premise of torture as a device to see the Albequerque works. Seriously, it's the movie's world. It's the movie's Albequerque.

And of course there are no intended words for what Anna said. It's "The Truth" after all, and anything simple movie-makers would come up would likely fall flat. We just have to, again, accept the premise that Anna saw the afterlife and most likely described it to Madame. 2 hours of a description of Alberquerque might be too much to take.

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I think that if any of the cult's victims had told Mademoiselle "Yes, there IS an afterlife, & it's BEAUTIFUL", she (& the other cult members) would probably be willing to live as long as possible instead of committing suicide. Why? Because they would think that they could always go to this incredible, beautiful afterlife later, so why rush it? Why not continue to live for a while longer? Mademoiselle's suicide seems to be motivated by the most doubt possible in an afterlife.

I also doubt that the cult broke up just because she committed suicide. The cult had a zillion members, & truckloads of money, & nothing says "I want to LIVE!" like having truckloads of money.

Finally, to whoever it is that keeps asking people "How old are you?", to paraphrase Anna, "Keep sounding stupid by constantly ending all of your posts with that question".
---
IF I want your opinion, I'll GIVE it to you.

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I'm fully aware that this post is 3 years old, but I've been waiting to read something like this ever since I saw this film. You are completely right!

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Been thinking about this all night and all day. All I can come up with is the follow due to personal reasoning and no degrees in psychology.
Before the third act and after all of us have tired of seeing this girl brutalized she hears her dead friends voice and we know that she has done amazingly well to make it so far, strong of mind body and spirit. Getting skinned alive is just about as far as the director can now go, it's the final insult to the viewer. Then it's time for all the crap to stop and for us to see what's going on and have things turned around or what's the point.
I think that Anna was strong enough of mind body soul and will to communicate whatever she said to the evil bitch, and that information caused her to make that final decision to kill herself. Her own evil was her undoing and I'm choosing to think that nobody else had to get tortured and who cares what happens to the cult after this because we've all endured enough. You need some form of uplift, and I think that final shot of her was the serenity of victory after all the abuse, she had succeeded.

You can't have a film like this and go from depression to depression to ambiguous depression, you can't watch someone brutalized and not have a payoff. The end credits music, the music is uplifting, this indicates that it's all over now and the abuse that was endured was not for nothing.

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I don't think she comitted suicide out of dissapointment that there is no afterlife. If Anna had told Mademoiselle there was nothing then she would probably fear death.
The way I see it was that Anna tells Mademoiselle about the beauty of the afterlife. Knowing that Mademoiselle, in her quest for the afterlife, would most likely invite death upon herself to be part of that beauty. She says "Keep doubting" because she doesn't doubt anymore. She's convinced that there's something to look forward to now.
Notice Mademoiselle's face when she listens to Anna's whispering. That's not dissapointment but curiousness and interest.

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[deleted]

You failed to read my original post. Everyone sees that, it's what the director wanted, and then, he wanted the audience to realize we are wrong. Well, the smart ones anyway

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[deleted]


What are the hints or evidence in favor of your interpretation?


You mean besides the part where she kills herself?

(What I find funny about how people interpret this movie is the director was so good at tricking them, that even after the obvious reveal, they cannot change their closed minds. They will even think there is any other reason people commit suicide besides defeat, failure, and giving up. )

How about the part where she says "keep doubting" to her friend, to warn him not to believe, because his belief will be crushed, like hers was?






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[deleted]

You two both sound smart but you're too close-minded!



You're saying everything so matter-of-fact-ly when maybe THERE IS NO DEFINITE ANSWER.

Maybe it's left to the viewers' imagination as to what Anna said and why Mademoiselle killed herself.

Maybe you're right. Maybe you're wrong. KEEP DOUBTING.

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[deleted]

THERE IS NO DEFINITE ANSWER.


Hope I can type this accurately because I am laughing uncontrollably right now, but a character that kills herself is the single most definitive answer you could possibly get.



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But why, though? Why is it SO definitive as you say? If you were just told that the afterlife is amazing, wouldn't that be good reason to kill yourself? Yes, I know typically suicide is because people cannot bear the pain of the moment (or long suffering) and that's their way out. but Mlle was not emotional like that. She was a psychopath, and they do only what serves them and typically don't kill themselves...they just do what they can to advance themselves. So if she finds out the afterlife is real and good, well damnit, she's going to go there and she's not going to tell anyone else about it because she's a selfish and sadistic bitch. That's how I saw it.

Now...after reading these boards, the idea that Anna intentionally lied as revenge does actually seem plausible. So I'm not totally writing your theory off, either. It's just not oh so obvious as you seem to think. I found Mlle's body language and all that to be that she liked what she heard from Anna, and was like f- this *beep* I'm hoppin that train asap! and then killed herself. (And yes, the "keep doubting" was sarcastic...and again, she only cares about herself, not sharing the 'gift' Anna gave her with anyone else. Taunting everyone that she has the knowledge and then killing herself before they find out is sadistic torture in itself, which is what she does. Even telling Etienne to keep doubting in that snarky tone! Bitch lol)

Which makes me think...maybe it's a combination of both. Maybe Anna intentionally told her it was something amazing so that she WOULD kill herself and the tortures would stop. So ultimately, she got revenge because she knew Mlle would off herself after hearing the good news. There , takes the best from both theories lol. So she still got her revenge on behalf of her friend, by ridding the world of the torturing Mlle.

Something like that.

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Her "keep doubting" phrase is sarcastic.


That's your first factual error.

There is no "obvious reveal".


And that's your second. And look at this, I already explained why: Suicide is an obvious reveal of defeat. That it is not obvious in this movie to you, means the director fooled you, completely.

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[deleted]

Since she does the opposite of what she says, it's obvious that it's sarcastic.


And now I have to question your mental development, to even think that the defining moment of a brutal horror movie is...sarcasm. I mean how dumb are you? Not to mention you're factually wrong. She didn't keep doubting, and it destroyed her. It's an obvious warning to her friend you dolt.

Their society is obsessed with determining what happens after death.


Which is why she wouldn't shoot herself in the head, alone. She would continue with the planned meeting, expecting great success. Instead, it was abject failure. Just as the director showed us.

Again, hilarious watching how simple minds are incapable of changing, despite new evidence. If that isn't the definition of stupid, it should be.

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[deleted]

Mademoiselle's suicide. Sarcasm is simply something built into the behavioral scenario of saying thing X and doing the opposite thing Y as a way of sarcastically saying "thing Y is more effective"


The confusion is deep with this one. Sarcasm wouldn't make an unexpected twist ending more effective, it would make it less effective. Specifically in this case, the audience has that "Keep doubting" moment to ponder why Mademoiselle would warn her friend...and then "Bang!", we get the answer. That works, and worked perfectly.

that contradicts her relieved and peaceful demeanor.


That is not a "contradiction", it is the twist ending you dolt! . For the fourth time, you were led down a path by the director, the appearance that Mademoiselle won. The bullet through her brain shattered that preconception. (or would have, if your own brain, like Mademoiselles, wasn't completely filled with false belief.)

she would rush into the afterlife because she wouldn't want to waste any more time in this life.


Did you see the movie? There is a devout cult, a strict organization and there was an expected a victory speech on the way. But there was no speech given, because there was no victory acheived. There was, as the director showed us in the revealing twist, a defeated old lady who gave up on her lifelong quest, because of (what we now know) what Anna had whispered to her previously. That is the brilliance of Martys, and you missed the it completely.

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[deleted]

Let's retrace the steps and how I see them. Anna tells Mademoiselle of a world of peace and perhaps joy. Mademoiselle is visibly relieved and satisfied


and

if she is disappointed, "broken", and "defeated", according to you, why she she acting so relieved?


It's a credit to the director that you're still asking that ridiculous question, still saying she was "relieved" as if you saw her smile or give any positive indication. No, you're still simply seeing what you had previously believed was true, still deluded exactly as the director intended...at that point.

instead says "Keep doubting" and kills herself. That is a shockingly selfish act on her part, as you would expect from a cold villain like M.


Again, hilarity. She is not a cold superhero villain, she is part of a much greater insidious cult. The cult is the enemy. The cult is what makes the film interesting, not its figurehead. And it's the gathering cult which is used to further guide the audience into the false belief that they won. If you still don't get it there's no hope for you, you are just stuck on a wrong idea like a child and the intricacies of fiction are forever lost on you.

Why "keep doubting"?


Obviously, a warning to her friend: Keep doubting, because if you don't, like I didn't, you're gonna end up destroyed like me: Bang!. And let's not forget their entire conversation before that, intentionally cryptic so as to make audience believe (like you did from her reaction), that Mademoiselle got the answer she wanted, instead of getting the answer she did not want. Up until the gunshot, we all believed, wrongly, that Mademoiselle won. Thats what makes it such an effective, shocking twist, and what elevates Martys for those who understand it.

And why woudn't she simply tell the Cult that "there is nothing",


That takes courage. Mademoiselle is weak, and her will to live was crushed by Anna's declaration. Not to mention your version is way less dramatic. How boring an ending that is, everything as we expected, except instead of sharing with the cult (and a possible group suicide), there is...a solo suicide. . What a dopey movie that would be.

Instead, as I explained, the director toys with similar appearing emotional expressions like relief/dejection, plays with ambiguous phrases like "get an answer", and led everyone down a false path to be mentally slaughtered by the twist. All crystal clear upon reflection, and for those capable of reflection Martyrs is storytelling at its best every step of the way.

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[deleted]

My previous post so thoroughly crucified you, leaving you with almost nothing, I'm going to update the original post with it.

Back to hammering whatever is left of this trolling:

The cult is what is interesting.


Exactly why Mademoiselle wouldn't betray them, they are a single entity with a common goal for decades, shared victory. It is only defeat that she suffers alone, broken by Anna. And when we realize that beaten, barely alive skinned creature was not only willing but able to defeat her captor, that is what makes Martyrs great, and it is what you missed, completely.

And finally:

Your version achieves its "drama" by wishfully painting Anna as the counter-attacking supermartyr, and by killing the woman who supervises her torture.


All the more dramatic because it is unexpected, so unexpected that some people still can't comprehend it actually happened: Why Martyrs works is that we the audience don't know it happens, can't even fathom it could happen, until the shocking reveal forces us to question all of our previous mistaken notions. Evidenced, again, by all that is mentioned in the (now updated) original post. And we reflect upon the foreshadowing in the very beginning of the movie, when young Anna tells the doctors she knows she is there to help Lucie, and to find the bad people who hurt her.

http://TheMovieGoer.com

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[deleted]

Is that what happened?


Evidenced by how each one of your "points" got selectively silenced, until you're left with nothing but asking "is that what happened?"



http://TheMovieGoer.com

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[deleted]

you dodged half of my arguments and comments


The cowards way: claiming something, but not providing any evidence.

Because the evidence here, like the evidence in Martyrs, proves you not just wrong, but a close-minded fool:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1029234/board/inline/188235766







http://TheMovieGoer.com

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[deleted]

[deleted]

How is it unexpected


It is so unexpected you still can't wrap your struggling mind around it.

http://TheMovieGoer.com

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Hello there submachine,

I've been reading everything since your first post on this board carefully, and I must say, you're the BOLT here! I can't wrap my mind around the fact that you're so in love with your own theory, which you shove peoples throat as if it were the only one. Unless we get an explanation from the director no one will know for sure. Although I find your theory the least bit convincing. People want to reason with you and try to discuss the ending in a normal way, but left stranded because you are the one that holds on to your own theory, not hearing out other arguments. You seek out the points you can sort of back-up and leave the important things unanswered. I think about 95% of the people on this thread disagree with you and of course you feel attacked and give people names and stuff. I know everyone here sees that there is no reasoning with you. That's why everybody stopped arguing with you, giving you a false feeling of victory!

WE'RE WITH THE VIPERS!

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I've been reading everything since your first post on this board


My first post was 13 years ago, but thanks anyway.

http://TheMovieGoer.com

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