Indecent Proposal -1993- -
And she did. Not because she stopped loving Leo. But because Marcus was lonely in a way that made the ocean sound like a whimper. For one terrible, human hour, she held him. Not with passion. With pity. And that, she realized, was the real indecency.
“Everything is for sale,” Marcus said, finishing his bourbon. “The only variable is the price. You have forty-eight hours.” indecent proposal -1993-
When John Gage (Robert Redford) makes his offer, the film creates a tension between use-value and exchange-value. David and Diana view their marriage as a partnership of equals, yet Gage views Diana as a commodity to be acquired. The million dollars represents a "deus ex machina" that could save their material lives, but it requires the symbolic death of their marriage. The decision to accept the offer marks the transition of the marriage from a sacred covenant to a market transaction. The film suggests that once a price is put on intimacy, the intimacy is effectively destroyed, regardless of whether the transaction occurs. And she did