Thread:LostGod2000/@comment-27586321-20141028185815/@comment-27586321-20141028205341

No I know that this isn't about him. It's about his sidekick, the Gentleman Caller. Now, he didn't have too much to do in the film but let's look to the book, which I have read and he is much more developed. He is in many ways more bloodthirsty and brutal than Casanova. He rapes and murders women and cutts off their feet, toes, or tongue for trophies, threatens bonus kills if his crimes aren't mentioned in the papers, and even expressed desire to "nibble" on Kate Mcteirnan's skin. Unlike Casanova, he is more direct in his murders and had no rules on whther or not he'd kill them. He just does. Even Casanova somewhat disapproves of his actions. He seems brutal enough, and I think like Casanova, he merely sees him as another sicko he can share his crimes with. But one sentence in the book kinda gets to me. : "He reveled in the secure feeling it gave him, the reassuring front-page new stories that told him he truly existed, that he wasn't a twisted figment of his own imagination". Does that mean he's insecure? He seems too sick to be that way, but if so, I'll have to remove him as a CM.