Cape Fear
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:55:00
Are you the Drama teacher?
:55:02
And you're, let me guess.
:55:07
Cecile James?
:55:08
No, I'm Danielle Bowden.
:55:12
Danielle. Oh, we spoke last night.
:55:14
Yeah.
:55:16
Oh, I'm sorry. How rude.
:55:19
It's okay.
:55:26
"I think we're alone now"
:55:32
Okay.
:55:44
Thanks. Here.
:55:47
I'm going to give this to you.
:55:52
Little trick I learned. Take it.
:55:57
You know when we spoke
on the phone last night?

:56:02
You really made sense to me.
:56:06
I thought a lot.
:56:08
Those are human truths.
That's what it's all about.

:56:10
And that's what we deal with here.
:56:13
See the book you have, Thomas Wolfe?
:56:15
It's all about self-discovery,
the inner voyage.

:56:20
I like the end...
:56:23
...where Eugene's journey was really...
:56:26
...mystical, you know?
:56:28
It was almost like a pilgrimage.
:56:32
Almost like a cop-out, if you ask me.
:56:34
Though those were the facts of Wolfe's life.
:56:38
The novel is what you would call
a roman à clef.

:56:40
You know what that is?
:56:43
Sure.
:56:45
Well, nonetheless, you can't escape
your demons just by leaving home.

:56:49
Although writers do find new freedom
when they relocate abroad.

:56:52
Take Henry Miller.
Have you read his trilogy?

:56:55
Plexus, Nexus and Sexus?
:56:58
-You haven't read that?
-No.


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