nuuuuu, stoooooop
Gender: Female
Location: America
Rank: Admin
Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2007 5:16 am
Posts: 5255
Macbeth wrote:
I think it would be interesting to hear some of your opinions as to why Godot would go through with such a self-less act of courage to save the life of another.
I think "selfless" is the LAST word I would use to describe Godot.
In the end, Godot did save Maya's life. But if he had any REAL care for her safety, he would have prevented Pearl from finding the letter in the first place. Or, if he didn't want to hurt Pearl's feelings, he could have pulled Maya aside once she was alone in the temple, and warned her. He could have confessed to what had happened the moment the police arrived, to keep her from going through the pain of being on trial after her ordeal. He didn't tell Pearl the truth about her mother so that she wouldn't feel bad about it...but he has no trouble putting Maya on the witness stand when she's been starving in a frozen mountain cave for days? So that she can defend the man who just murdered her mother!?
Does ANY of that refelct an honest desire on his part to give a shit about Maya, her safety, or her feelings? Doesn't seem like it to me.
(The idea that anyone needed to protect Pearl from the truth also baffles me, to be honest - she spent a year visiting her mother in prison. She stood next to Phoenix when Adrian described trying to kill herself. I think "I can't find my mother's letter" is much less traumatizing than her cousin's life being in danger).
The only thing Godot did for Maya's sake and not only his own was killing Dahlia when he realized the plan had gone wrong. But even that he admits was not ONLY for her. It was still mostly for himself.