V a woman
I recommended this film to a friend of mine. After watching it, he said it was ok but he didn't know whether V was a male or a female and, unfortunately, he was serious. I wonder what V's reaction would have been.
shareI recommended this film to a friend of mine. After watching it, he said it was ok but he didn't know whether V was a male or a female and, unfortunately, he was serious. I wonder what V's reaction would have been.
shareYou friend is very observant. That is another plot point this dreadful movie decided to throw out from the novel. The whole point of V is that you don't know who he (or she) is. Alan Moore's fantastic graphic novel showed that there was the possibility that all of V's backstory (survivor of horrendous medical experimentation at the concentration camp) may have all been made up by V. So the reader is left all the way through guessing as to the truth of V, you don't know his (or her's) name, you think you know his (or her's) backstory but you can't be sure, and you think that he (or she) is male but can't be sure. None of those questions are answered by the end of the novel.
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I thought the movie made clear that V was a man.
He begins the film by telling Evey that he is "a man in a mask".
In the diary that talks about his origin, the doctor refers to him as "the man in room 5"
And everyone in the movie, when speaking of V says "he", "him" and "his".
~Brad
I thought the movie made clear that V was a man.
All signs point to male, yes, particularly the doctor's diary. V might lie or shade the truth, but the doctor is less likely to.
We can also surmise that, although V might be lying about his origins to some extent, that he must have had something to do with Larkhill, or else his targets (and their reactions) make no sense whatsoever.
It's more than likely that he was a prisoner, experimented on (which might have boosted his mental and/or physical acumen), and because of pronouns and other such indicators, yeah, probably male.
After that, there's nothing but Qs without As regarding V.
Moore employed a similar tactic for the Joker in Batman: The Killing Joke (my favourite Moore of all).
All for a box of chocolates...
As far as the movie goes, he's a man.
All for a box of chocolates...
Interesting concept, but in the movie, he sounds like a man, acts likes a man, and looks like a man.
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