top of page
Search

The Prestige

  • spoonmorej
  • Jun 24, 2017
  • 1 min read

The Prestige was a movie that I thought was great when I saw it, but then it continued to stick with me even after I watched more classic movies. It’s a great example of why stories depend on the characters and their goals; the entire film follows two magicians and their obsession towards the other. They sacrifice everything so that they could prove to be the best, and the distance they go is farther than any average character. The other interesting part is that there is no true antagonist, both characters have triumphant moments as they succeed, and sympathetic moments when they fail. I personally connected to Hugh Jackman’s character, Robert Angier, even after he succumbs to what leads to his downfall. Only at the end does Christian Bale’s character, Alfred Borden, show his true sacrifice, and that made me wonder why the perspective of the film was in favor of Robert Angier. The reason might be to raise that very question, and prove my favorite line near the end:

“But if you could fool them, even for a second, you could make them wonder. Then you got to see something very special… it was the look on their faces.”

Film is for entertainment, The Prestige excels at what most movies fail, to have a Prestige, and that is why this movie is so memorable.

Story Rating: 9/10

Character Rating: 9/10

 
 
 
 RECENT POSTS: 

© 2017 by Back Seat Reviewer. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page