How does enemy mine end
Davidge plans on using this opportunity to grab Jerry's futuristic space gun, but the ship is booby-trapped. Davidge winds up getting electro-shocked and left to Jerry's devices. So, an opening about wanton bloodlust based on half-assed information, going on headfirst into a battle against a society you know little about and having it ultimately blow up in your face?
Oh Wolfgang. If only we had listened to you in , when you were probably thinking that this movie was a Cold War allusion. We hit the second act of the film. Now Jerry and Davidge are the best of friends, after realizing that they must rely on each other for survival. This is cemented after a chance encounter with cheap Sarlacc knock-off Was Wolfgang trying to tell us that two men could live together in harmony?
How could he not have been? Both men provide the emotional support that each other so sorely needs on an abandoned planet filled with horrible meteorites and Sarlacc-like pit dwellers. Sure, Jerry's supposed to be an asexual being, but let's look at this objectively. That's Lou Gossett Jr. Put L. On the other side, we have Davidge, who at this point has embraced the shag, growing one of the mightiest beards in the history of cinema.
They live together, maintain a home, and provide emotional support to each other on their lonely shithole planet. Despite their qualms, the two end up having a child together. Sadly, Jerry dies at childbirth, leaving Davidge alone with their offspring Zammis, a slimy little alien puppet thing. In a world where Proposition 8 looms over us like a dark cloud of social intolerance, what would actually happen? Look to Enemy Mine for your answer. Improve this answer. Legion Legion 5, 26 26 silver badges 35 35 bronze badges.
Stealing from the IMDB Alternate Version notes : American version featured an alternative ending where the two get drunk and walk off in separate directions arguing at each other; in the British version they start yelling and a bomb from the sky falls and blows everything apart.
To increase the viewer's sympathy with the characters,: Enemy mine uses the Zammis sub-plot; he, in effect, replaces his parent, and is used as a foil to show Davidge's development as a character.
I'd take a guess that an updated variant on the British version is what you are talking about. I didn't realize Toshiro Mifune ended up getting pregnant in Hell in the Pacific. I'll have to watch that again.
The plot of enemies having to work together to survive is older than that movie. Legion - Heh. Based on, not flat out remade from. Although the image of a pregnant version of Toshiro is pretty hilarious. Hell in the Pacific was also a two man remake of None But the Brave. I think a pregnant Lee Marvin would have been better.
Show 1 more comment. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown. Upcoming Events. November Topic Challenge: Samuel R. Delany ends Nov Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. Related Hot Network Questions. Question feed. The world of science fiction is filled with fascinating aliens - intelligent creatures who are infinitely more than lovable characters in reptile skins.
Why couldn't the Drac be truly alien in this film? There are occasional moments of inspiration, such as the fact that Dracs are male and female rolled into one, but "Enemy Mine" simply uses that as an excuse for a couple of weepy scenes and the creation of a Drac child that seems destined for the Little League.
The idea of aliens with combined sexes has been handled much more interestingly in books like Isaac Asimov's "The Gods Themselves," in which there were three sexes, not two. And even the most rudimentary science fiction aliens usually manage to seem truly different than humans; once the Drac in "Enemy Mine" learns English, he seems scarcely less human than the human. They are both very good, but saddled with a predictable and sentimental script. If they had been left all alone on their barren planet, they might just possibly have arrived at some interesting story possibilities.
Instead, "Enemy Mine" descends to the level of 's space opera with the arrival of evil human slave-traders who kidnap Dracs and force them to work in mines. As the slavers stood over their captives with whips, I found myself wondering how cost-effective it would be to transport manual laborers millions of light years.
Surely a technology capable of arriving at the planet Fyrine IV would have figured out a better way to mine its ores? Then there are the truly unbelievable moments, as when Quaid's apparently lifeless body is found by a human spaceship that is never seen; the cornball moment when he comes back to life; the human spaceships returning to Fyrine like the cavalry to the rescue, and the final idiotic shootout.
Were they so bankrupt of ideas, in a movie rich with them, that they had to resolve the plot with yet another fistfight and gunfight? By the time the noble, uplifting ending arrived, I'd given up. Here is a movie that made no compromises in its art direction, its special effects and its performances - and then compromised everything else in sight.
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