On 6/21/07, William Pietri william@scissor.com wrote:
Anthony wrote:
On 6/21/07, Thomas Dalton thomas.dalton@gmail.com wrote:
They don't spoil good stories. Shawshank Redemption, Citizen Kane, Fight Club, three examples of movies which were *better* the second time around.
Sure, but would the first time have been better had you been simply told the ending? Watching a film a second time and watching it for the first time having been told the ending are very different things.
I don't know, for those three movies I think I would have enjoyed the first time of watching them more if I was told the ending.
I think that's a great thing for you to decide for yourself, and I have no issue with that.
Some have expressed a view that we should decide that for all our readers, against the obvious wishes of the artists whose works we cover. I think that's a mistake, and a large one.
You can create an article for those who haven't read the book (or watched the movie) and don't want to know the details about it. Or you can create an article for those who have read the book, plus those who don't plan to read the book, plus those who want to know more about the details before they read the book. You can't, in my opinion, create a good article that suits everyone.