Jin
Catastrophic Captain
Posts: 52
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Post by Jin on Oct 15, 2006 3:15:58 GMT -5
This is my first time posting on this board in three years. The last time I was logged on was Jun 6, 2003, 10:08pm, according to my profile, haha.
Anyway...
To me, the most important quote in The End is this:
This essentialy proves to me that Count Olaf did not start the fire, something we were basically led to believe for a while. And in a way, this makes me look at Olaf in a totally different light. I think all of this time he pursured the Baudelaires in order to make them miserable - as miserable as he felt when his parents were killed by the Baudelaires. That, and maybe the money.
Who do you guys think did it? Discuss.
I think it was Esme.
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Post by Wizz on Oct 15, 2006 6:16:07 GMT -5
I doubt anyone thought Olaf lit the fire, it only looked like that in the movie.
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Post by SadOccasion on Oct 15, 2006 7:09:19 GMT -5
I thought he did. Evidence in the books has been pointing that way for a LOOOONG time.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 15, 2006 8:29:21 GMT -5
regardless if he 'lit' it he still helped plan it.
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Post by ineedyourhelp on Oct 15, 2006 9:04:59 GMT -5
I agree with Jin in saying that Olaf was pursuing the Baudelaires to make them as miserable as he was when the Baudelaire parents killed his parents. I don't believe that he started the fire, but it could have been one of his associates.
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Jin
Catastrophic Captain
Posts: 52
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Post by Jin on Oct 15, 2006 10:17:00 GMT -5
I thought he dod. Evidence in the books has been pointing that way for a LOOOONG time. Agreed. But if you think about it, the Autobiography was only hinting that Esme had married Jerome in order to get access to 667 Dark Avenue. We just assumed that was why Olaf was with Esme - that they had planned it together.
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