Celebrity Death Match Special: Determinism versus Free Will 8, This Time It's Machinal
— So what did you think of the play?
— It was great! She did such a great job of portraying that poor woman. You said it was based on a—
— That's right. A true story about a woman who killed her husband. I don't think that's sending a very positive message.
— But the point is she never had any choice. This was the only solution she could see. The whole staging is arranged to show that. Sometimes the only thing you can do is take a bottle full of small stones and club your husband to death with it.
— You always have a choice.
— Sure, you always have a choice, because you're a strong, capable, rational person. But she isn't. Many people are like that.
— That's no excuse.
— Look, it's a Greek tragedy. Couldn't be clearer. In the scene where she's at work, the rest of the typing pool is obviously the chorus.
— So?
— Well, that view of life has a fair track record.
— I'm still not buying it.
— Right, let's talk about something that actually is an undisputed Greek tragedy. When you watch Antigone, is your reaction that you just want to shake some sense into the heroine?
— Yeah, pretty much.
— Okay. Basically, you just didn't think it was any good?
— No, I loved it! Worth coming just for the creative lighting.
— Um... you mean that in fact we agree?
— Absolutely.
No result due to unexpected deus ex Machinal