Gosamr
Member
- May 6, 2021
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Hmmm... I realize it is impossible not to sound clichéd, but it seems to me that the street the Dev has decided to take us down in Episode Two suggests something akin to a movie based on a Stephen King ("Salem's Lot")/David Lynch ("Blue Velvet") storyline directed by Quentin Tarantino.This may be a big stretch, but I wonder if this game is supposed to end up being the slow decent of a man into losing himself and becoming something completely different than he thought he was. The real psychopaths of the world — Ted Bundy, Frederick Coe, Malcolm Fairley, and the like — don't start out with serious crimes. This could be the early stages of the MC becoming a monster. I really hope not, though: those types of games are one of the only types I really don't like. Still, if this game is meant to show the MC starting to lose control but then ultimately regaining it and moving forward, I would probably still enjoy it, even if parts would be harder for me to get through.
The mc is clearly a devoted, professional, highly reputed educator, who though seemingly oblivious at the time of the gravity of the situation, retrospectively sees his personal weaknesses (and it looks like possible sexual inclinations and appetite too...maybe yet to be revealed) being the cause of one of his student's tragic suicide. In retrospect he feels he could and should have either been stronger or at least done more to support and thereby probably/possibly save his student. I take this from the glimpses shown to us of the kind of weaknesses, certainly for very young girls, and indecisiveness he possesses in his behavioral reactions throughout the heated dialogue and ultimately violent conclusion to the confrontation with Luna at the motel.
Like Stephen King's "Salem's Lot", in the first episode of "Buried Desires", Betisis has created a very normal, heart-warming family environment (like the outward appearance of Salem's Lot itself) mired in a nightmarish past event (like Mears' sanity-jarring experience as a child at the Marston House). Then in the second episode, just as Mr. King takes us round back of the homey town façade to show us the depravity and the graves, so Betisis begins to reveal the kind of darker, domineering nature (sex with the woman in the restroom and the girl in the junkie's room) within the mc and particularly the outwardly respectable educator's comfort and easy assimilation into the more sordid places and with the people at the motel.
If the mc were as straightforward and upstanding a man as he appears to be, would he really have gone so far as to knock on the door of the junkie's room and actually involve himself in the cause of what was going on? Or was it perhaps a knee-jerk counter-reaction to his inaction in turning a blind eye to his soon-to-be dead student's professed feelings for him? After all, it was not a scream he heard, just a noise...a sexually generated sound (which again may show his increasingly revealed almost irresistible attraction to sex?). I don't think under normal circumstances, without the faintest idea of what he would be getting himself into in such a dark and shady place, he would have crossed the line and actually knocked on the door, especially given that his sole reason for being at the motel in the first place was to finally be able to corner Luna in the motel room where, before the "distractions" of the room, he seemed singularly focused and intent on squeezing the truth about her recent past out of her.
I could go on, but I hope, if you are even still with me, that you get the gist of what I'm leading up to, which is that, to me, it's is far too early days to be deciding the fate of "Buried Desires" and the storytelling intent of the Dev.
The style and sophistication of the dialogue and the visual presentation tells me at least that there is nothing left-field about Betisis' second episode and that if we are just patient and allow as much artistic license as each of us needs to be able to bear with "Buried Desires", we shall all be ultimately be rewarded. Of course, I could be wrong, but as I said it's too soon to call right now.
I also finally want to say that despite its inherent (though only temporary) departure from the main storyline, I am also very encouraged by the concept of and the quality in the twins' side story.
Apologies, I guess I did go on...