Match Point

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I agree with all the above, but I have other questions too. All here. Comments welcome!

Keep in mind this was a post from an older blog, so it's been a while since I've seen the movie. I definitely want to see it again to solidify my philosophical opinion on it. In the mean time, if I screw anything up, I apologize.


1) Before the ghosts appear, the character Chris is up late, obsessively writing something at his computer. What? It's odd that we don't know, in fact, nothing we know about this character suggests that he's the kind to be driven to the keyboard to write anything - he's not the kind to sit up late doing business email, certainly. Nor would he dream about writing. I think Allen may be signaling Think About Writers.

This is after he kills Nola? I might be totally off base here...but maybe he was toying with writing a confession? But he keeps going back and forth because writing a confession would be the easy way out? He wants to be caught, and so writing a confession is natural, but it wouldn't prove that justice exists. It would be cheating.

I honestly don't remember this part, so I might be very wrong. :)

3) Now the ghosts show up, and start saying things that don't fit exactly with the movie. Scarlett says "prepare to pay the price", but, he gets away with it!. She says 'what you did was clumsy and full of holes' - ok that's true but it's not the kind of thing we say when describing crimes... you don't say a crime was full of holes. People may say a movie is clumsy and full of holes, and directors may say this kind of thing about their own work, in self-critical moments. She then goes on to say "your child paid the price". Who's that? The child not yet conceived? But his wife is pregnant at the time.....


As I stated above in the post, he did pay the price. Nothing worse could have happened. But that's irrelevant I think. I think these "ghosts" are part of his sub-concious or his conscience. He's berating himself, and he's not sure whether he should regret what he did or if he should be comforted by the fact that he will probably be caught. He's telling himself he'll get caught, that his crime was sloppy. But then maybe he regrets it when he thinks about the fact that if he does get caught, his child would have to grow up without a father. (Does he know about the kid yet?) Actually, either way, the kid will pay the price. Either no father, or a father that has sunken into nihilism and depression. He'll raise his kid to be just like him, intentionally or unintentionally.


I don't know, I'm just guessing right now, I'll have to go back and watch it again.


4) the ghosts are looking almost directly into the camera - you can't see him while they're talking. Leaves it a bit ambiguous as to whom they're talking to. The older woman doesn't understand why she had to be hurt.

You can't see him while they are talking because they are him?

Your theory about Woody Allen being self-critical here is very interesting, and sounds pretty possible. But I don't think that this stuff didn't make sense with the movie or was out of character for Chris. I think it might have had a double meaning. ;)
OK - just reading this post again trying to work out the justice issue...

I'm not convinced that Chris is desperate for justice. I think he'd like to believe it exists and that it would be nice if something would happen to make him believe it exists. But he doesn't and that's just the way it is.

Personally, I believe that we can trust in the order of the universe. So from my perspective, I'd say Chris's reality had less to do with luck and more to do with the fact that we do create our own reality and the universe helps us in this endeavor. (What we think about expands.) He loved tragedy and despair even though he also wished there was some small measure of justice. But he didn't really believe in justice. So tragedy and despair is what he got. That, to me, is a form of justice. (Justice with a little "j"? It's not like a God came down and zapped him for being bad or anything.)

But, if you believe the world is based on luck rather than some sort of divine order, then discovering there is no meaning is not justice. It's just reality and meaning is wishful thinking.

But - the very end makes you wonder. Who is it that says of the baby, I don't care if he is great, I just want him to be lucky? When this is said, I remember Chris looking very forlorn which does make the ending very ambiguous. It could be pointing to a sort of justice - especially since the wedding ring fell backward rather than forward which, according to Chris's definition at the beginning of the movie is bad luck.

I like the ambiguity. It makes it a marvelous movie.
I figured that he had been sort of pushing at the limits, trying to tempt life into proving that justice existed. But I guess the freedom reading might make more sense...perhaps it is both combined?

And yes, I agree that if you start out thinking that there is nothing other than luck, then the ending isn't suggesting justice, only suggesting reality. But that's what I find so ironic. The justice with a little j is much more subtle and subversive than the nihilist ever imagines. Of course Chris won't ever realize what happened to him there, he doesn't have the right "artificial obvious" (from Annie Dillard). He doesn't know what to look for. He's looking for a grand gesture, a real punishment, and he won't find it.

This movie was actually one of the things that helped convince me to believe in a panentheistic God. Combine this with John L'Heureux's The Shrine at Altamira, where the salvation doesn't come in the form we would have chosen, and it's somewhat complete.

Punishments don't have to come in the form we expect, and salvation doesn't usually come in the form we expect. It all points to a different mode of operation that runs behind all things. Human Justice is not supreme. The other kind is much more subtle, much more quiet, and much more powerful, if you only train yourself to notice it.

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