perfect crime?” In Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado” there is strong evidence that the main character, Montresor, has in fact committed the perfect crime. This is a dark tale of an insane man who suffers from “the thousand injuries of Fortunato.” (226) Poe manages to create a narrator who is able to manipulate and kill another man while keeping a very calm voice explaining to the audience how perfectly justified he was in committing these horrible acts. He wanted to get away with his
Randy tells cassidy “The only place I get hurt is out there” pointing away from the stage, he feels like the stage is a safe place, where he is loved and people care about him because of his wrestling. For them to be perfect their whole life, an obsessive energy must be put into their art form, they transform into either a wrestler or a ballerina. This is also shown in both films when Nina has no friends, and Randy has pushed away his family. In ‘Black Swan’ Nina trains everyday, we
grudges can sometimes lead to murder. In “The Cask of Amontillado” Montressor held in his fillings instead of talking to Fortunato and letting him know he did not like the way he insulted him all the time. Montressor only became angrier, since he held it in, and he then started to think how he could kill Fortunato to stop the insults and get away with murder. When Montressor ran into Fortunato at the carnival, he acted happy to have run into his friend Fortunato. He stated “…you are luckily met…”