As is often the case on M&TV, the release of a movie can attract comparisons with real world parallels, prompting people to postulate over whether the event
So i recently saw Gone Girl and liked it a lot. I love anything David Fincher does. My only question is this. What exactly did they change about the ending?
About half-way into Gone Girl we learn that Amy's disappearance was a staging carefully prepared by her to take revenge on her husband by having him convicted,
During the first half of Gone Girl, we see many scenes narrated by Amy. These are as written in her diary. Some of it was true while some of it was not. We
In Gone Girl, Amy's neighbor Noelle Hawthorne comes to detective Boney and tells her that she was a friend of Amy. Next we see that while her investigation is g
In Gone Girl, Detective Rhonda Boney knows that Amy has killed Desi deliberately. But still just because they are unable to find any clue they let her go. That
In the movie Gone Girl, Amy has killed a man. She has his blood all over him. The cameras in the house would prove that Neil’s character was innocent. Eve
In "Gone Girl", it seems as though the are a lot of injuries to Amy's head: the male criminal who steals her money knocks her head against a wall, she conks her
Throughout the movie "Gone Girl", there is an orange house cat that appears in numerous scenes. Is this some kind of symbolism?
After all that she does, it just doesn't make sense to me why Nick would stay with Amy at the end of Gone Girl. Didn't he feel afraid that she might kill him? I
At the end of Gone Girl, Amy is pregnant and this is the reason that Nick decides to stay with her. However, it is unclear to me who the father really is. I
In the movie, Gone Girl, Nick hires a lawyer from New York, Tanner, whose legal retainer is 100k. I searched a bit on the internet, a legal retainer is an upfr
I noticed a weird thing in the Gone Girl film. Amy is shown spitting (saliva) in another girl's (the name is Greta, if I remember correctly) drinking glass when