14 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- 9/10, 22 October 2004
Author:
desperateliving from Canada
I'm continually blown away with Fassbinder. And it's all the more
affecting because, like all great artists, he challenges your
conceptions and forces you to have a new experience. We have to fight
our way through his movie, critiquing everything we see. Fox is sure he
will win the lottery. Today will be the day. And, he does. Like the
ending of "Ordet," this is a cliché embraced, but why? Fassbinder is
far too intelligent and original a talent to be conventional without a
reason. (In fact, in a regular movie Fox's lottery win would be a
thrilling set-piece, sitting in front of a TV screen in a living room,
with some dying family member in a hospital bed awaiting money for
treatment. Here, we don't even see the win.) Of course the lottery win
is a set-up for the way money affects a relationship, especially in gay
culture.
Basically, Fassbinder is truth. There's a much more honest depiction of
factory work here than in, say, von Trier's later films, where he dotes
on the "common" man (just as often, woman) as if a simpleton that we
should feel sorry for (I doubt they feel sorry for themselves; von
Trier just obliges us to feel that way on their behalf). The mistakes
made here are by the controllers of the factory -- it's Fox's scheming
lover's father who gets the business bankrupt, and it's Fox, after he
lends his lover money to get them out of debt, who screws up the
printing. But Fox isn't humiliated by his mistake, whereas a blind,
helpless Bjork in "Dancer in the Dark" is made to be a pitiable object.
(To be fair, both Fassbinder and von Trier have a tendency to wallow in
the miserable.)
Fassbinder focuses his film mainly on the class barrier -- Fox's lover
makes insulting comments to him regarding proper manners -- but he's
also giving us a kind of gay relationship film noir -- we see ex-lovers
kissing (in a ceiling mirror!) behind current lovers' backs, and money
corruption plays a large part in the film. (Fox's lover is excellent in
his role; he never plays a character who's sole purpose for living is
to plot in a corner about how he'll be evil today.) And Fassbinder's
view of society as something that destroys people is very noirish (Fox
isn't completely in the dark; he does understand he's being used as
it's happening). But to be sure, Fassbinder is also detailing the
upper-class homosexual in a very critical way; but I think he could
have done much more exposing the shallowness of gay culture. (He mainly
treats Fox's lover and his ex-/secret lover with
peeking-through-keyhole disdain, no doubt partly from Fox's
perspective, but I find that somewhat childish and not terribly
interesting. It's the view of someone who's been screwed over and feels
depressed about it, not someone intent on exposing why people are
corrupt, and how.) You don't know quite how to feel about this; in a
way Fassbinder is very brave -- he casts himself in an incredibly
unromantic role. And at the same time it's interesting because, while
Fassbinder doesn't seem too pleased with the superficial manner of the
gays whose eyes immediately fixate on money and looks, his own film
features an abundance of male nudity early on, of young, very
attractive boys that Fox himself is quite attracted to.
On a more technical aspect, there are plenty of interesting shots, of
reflections, or obscurities, or of the backs of heads or bodies; one
particularly stand-out scene is the one where Fox and his lover are
vacationing in Morocco and cruise for a man, and when in a taxi with
him the camera observes the festival around them while we listen to
their discussion. (The man they pick up is Ali from "Fear Eats the
Soul," and many of Fassbinder's stable appear in the film. The fact
that it's Ali playing a Moroccan -- albeit, one that's ostensibly gay,
so it may not in fact be Ali -- gives the film a self-referential bent,
though it's never gimmicky; rather, a continuous web of obsessions;
there is a comment on racism inputted in this scene, as well.) The
ending of the film is a bit too cruel and heavy-handed, though the
pessimist in me appreciates it, the part of me that believes society is
a pitiless social system out to wreck anything with a pureness of soul.
9/10
14 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- Fassbinder's finest performance?, 1 May 1999
Author:
Lexo-2 from Dublin, Ireland
Fox and his Friends caused some controversy when it was first made - it
was
thought that this story of a gay sideshow worker who wins the lottery,
only
to be exploited to the hilt by his upper-class lover, was potentially
homophobic. Fassbinder himself commented that the story could have been
about a heterosexual relationship, but it wouldn't have been as clear.
Fassbinder himself plays Fox - the burly ugly duckling of German cinema
miraculously slimmed down, looking almost handsome. Fox's street skills
and
good humour are undercut by his naivety, as his repellently snobbish
boyfriend systematically scams him out of the thousands of marks he's won
on
the lottery. The story proceeds with ruthless inevitability, as Fox
becomes
more and more demoralised. Yet the film contains some of Fassbinder's
sharpest comedy, particularly in a brilliantly embarrassing dinner party
scene. RWF is excellent in the title role; amazing to think that the guy
who wrote and directed the film (among so many others) could play a
good-natured dimwit with such conviction.
10 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- One of my favorites, 7 December 2002
Author:
Itchload from Massachusetts
Fassbinder is an acquired taste in every sense of the word. It took me
awhile to be able to fully digest and appreciate his films, and even then
it
can be difficult.
Fox and His Friends is one of his "accessible" movies, but Fassbinder at
his
most accessible would probably highly alienate most movie
goers.
I've seen this movie 3 times. The first time I thought "that was a good
Fassbinder". The second time, I thought the same. The third time, I
realized it was brilliant. It might be because I recently bought the
amazing dvd, which has an excellent transfer. Fassbinder made his films
quickly, very quickly, so a faded old videotape sometimes seems to reflect
that. However, when seeing the crisp DVD I realized just how great the
camera work was and how well-planned out the movie was.
This would make a good starting point for entering the world of Fassbinder
I
would think, it has it all: well-framed shots, black humor, and an
extremely depressing ending. Depending on how much you can relate to this
sort of thing, I would recommend checking it out.
p.s. The last scene was later homaged in My Own Private Idaho (another
great movie) and Fassbinder gives a really good performance in the
lead.
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- A Tale of Deceit, Power, and Victimization: Fassbinder at his Best!, 6 August 2006
Author:
gradyharp from United States
Rainer Werner Fassbinder has long been honored as the 'bad boy' in
European cinema, a writer/director/actor who repeatedly has taken
chances and because of his brutal honesty has succeeded in making a
stream of important films. FOX AND HIS FRIENDS dates back to 1975 and
remains one of Fassbinder's most successful films. As with all of his
films, Fassbinder deals with the homosexual subculture in Germany but
his main message goes far beyond the characters he creates: the
examination of how people manipulate people for personal gain and the
destruction that produces is a recurring problem and one that this film
certainly explores.
'Fox' - a nickname of Franz Bieberkopf - (acted with consummate skill
by Fassbinder himself) is a lower class gay carny kid whose lover is
arrested, leaving the carnival to collapse and leaving Fox without
support. Enter handsome Max (Karlheinz Böhm), a wealthy antiques
dealer, who picks up Fox, helps him buy the requisite 'lottery ticket'
on which Fox bases his hopes for financial survival (!) via
manipulative means, and takes him home, introducing Fox to his gay
friends who regard Fox as scum but show obvious physical attraction to
his rawness. Surprisingly Fox wins the lottery and suddenly has 500,000
DMs and with his new money, Max's friends abruptly see a target for
obtaining that money. One of the friends named Eugen (Peter Chatel)
takes Fox in as a lover and talks him into investing in Eugen's family
business of bookbinding. Eugen's father Wolf (Adrian Hoven) and mother
(Ulla Jacobsson) tolerate their son's life with a low class wretch,
ridiculing his manners and lack of culture and education, but willingly
take his money to salvage their business.
With a lover and a business and a role model to make him suave, Fox
dons fancy clothes, banters with his old friends in a tawdry club, and
makes the pretenses that at last he is secure and happy. But in time
Fox is blamed for problems at the business and when his funds have been
depleted on expensive vacations and apartments by the smarmy
self-centered Eugen, Fox realizes that now without money he has no
'fancy friends', no lover, no security and his life becomes unbearable:
the ending to the film is a tragedy beyond description.
Some would say the film is mannered in ways that depict stereotypes of
the gay world (effeminate men, transvestites, opportunists, hustlers,
etc), but Fassbinder is completely honest in his attempt to recreate a
subculture of a specific time in Germany. And the characters are well
written and well acted allowing us to look at Fassbinder's greater
picture of depravity between social class antipathies. In many ways
this is a difficult film to watch, but Fassbinder wisely places the
main character whom he enacts in a place where his foibles and lack of
higher class knowledge can be at once very humorous as well as
pitiable. FOX AND HIS FRIENDS has some minor flaws but it has already
become a classic in gay cinema repertoire. In German with English
subtitles. Grady Harp
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- One of Fassbinder's Best, 23 March 1999
Author:
harry-76 from Cleveland, Ohio USA
"Faustrecht der Freiheit" occupies a valued place in my video collection.
I
find myself returning to it again and again, thoroughly enjoying
Fassbinder's talent, which run throughout the film. Perceptive, witty and
challenging, this drama provides astute observations on societal
motivations, political aspirations and, above all, human
nature.
9 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- How to get exploited by your rich lover., 26 August 1999
Author:
Mithras-4 from Germany
One of Fassbinder´s most sad, dramatic films. Very 70´s and interesting.
The
gay theme must have been very provocative in these times. But if you want
to
watch another, even more gay film by him, watch his final movie "Querelle"
(after the novel "Querelle de Brest" by Jean Genet). For me this one is a
´9´.
9 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Fassbinder is excellent., 30 May 2003
Author:
Josh Klein (Quirky-) from Sydney, Australia.
The ironically titled Fox and His Friends, Fassbinder's rather excellent
study of a none-too-bright circus worker who wins a small fortune in the
lottery, is a touching film that features a great performance from
Fassbinder himself in the title role. A reflection on the class system and
homosexual relationships of 1970's Germany, Fox and His Friends is
unsentimental and guileless most of the time. Fox (Fassbinder) is one of
the
main attractions of a circus like festival, with his lover being arrested
for tax fraud. Fox somehow knows he'll win the lottery, so when he picks
up
a wealthy man at the local 'pick-up toilets', Fox makes sure he reaches
the
store in time to lodge his ticket. Cut to Fox celebrating his 500 000
marks
win, he's drinking in his usual tavern with the effete bar staff and
clientele. Fox then somehow becomes involved with a somewhat arrogant and
pretentious man, already in a relationship, who takes the naïve Fox for a
ride, spending his money in selfish and extravagant ways. Fassbinder's
melodrama is droll and poignant, with a tragically ironic ending. Oh, and
you have to give extra marks to a director who inserts lengthy nude scenes
of themselves in their films.
9 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :- Fasssbinder at his best, 28 August 2001
Author:
anemoni from Greece,Thessaloniki
A powerful and harrowing melodrama and one of Fassbinder's most accessible
movies,this is a must-see for all those interested in intelligent
filmmaking.The tragic story of Fox is masterfully and poignantly handled by
Fassbinder, while never slipping into sloppy sentimentality.At the same
time
the film explores sexual and political issues that are still very much
relevant.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Another Memorable Fassbinder's film, 1 September 2007
Author:
Galina from Virginia, USA
In "Fox and His Friends" (1975) which Rainer Werner Fassbinder wrote
and directed, he played a main character, Franz Bieberkopf alias "Fox",
a lower class, uneducated circus worker who loses his job when his
lover, the circus owner is arrested and sent to prison for tax fraud.
Fox believes in his luck and strikes it rich by winning 500,000 marks
in the lottery and very soon attracts the attention of an elegant,
posh, and sophisticated Eugen who knows very well how to make Fox pay
for his expensive habits and how to make him invest a lot of money in
his father business that is not very successful to say the least. What
fascinated me the most - how convincingly Fassbinder - one man
production company who came up with the idea, wrote the screenplay and
directed the movie- played seemingly tough but as it turned, confused
and vulnerable Fox. Another interesting aspect of the movie is the way
Fassbinder describes the gay community in Germany of the early 70s. He
does not make any excuses and he does not make his characters complete
villains or innocent victims. The story he tells could've happened in
any community.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Boy wins lottery, boy loses himself, 2 September 2003
Author:
Rogue-32 from L A.
This is the first Fassbinder film I've seen, thanks to Francois Ozon,
whose
adaptation of Fassbinder's play Water Drops on Burning Rocks turned me on
to
him. After seeing Fox and His Friends, which stars Fassbinder, I most
definitely want more. The story here is familiar - 'loser' gets to win
big
time and discovers how quickly people are willing - and able - to exploit
him. It's the way the piece is written and performed that elevates it
above
predictability; there is a certain tongue-in-cheek quality to the
proceedings that make it thoroughly captivating, through to the bitter
end.
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14 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

9/10, 22 October 2004
Author: desperateliving from Canada
I'm continually blown away with Fassbinder. And it's all the more affecting because, like all great artists, he challenges your conceptions and forces you to have a new experience. We have to fight our way through his movie, critiquing everything we see. Fox is sure he will win the lottery. Today will be the day. And, he does. Like the ending of "Ordet," this is a cliché embraced, but why? Fassbinder is far too intelligent and original a talent to be conventional without a reason. (In fact, in a regular movie Fox's lottery win would be a thrilling set-piece, sitting in front of a TV screen in a living room, with some dying family member in a hospital bed awaiting money for treatment. Here, we don't even see the win.) Of course the lottery win is a set-up for the way money affects a relationship, especially in gay culture.
Basically, Fassbinder is truth. There's a much more honest depiction of factory work here than in, say, von Trier's later films, where he dotes on the "common" man (just as often, woman) as if a simpleton that we should feel sorry for (I doubt they feel sorry for themselves; von Trier just obliges us to feel that way on their behalf). The mistakes made here are by the controllers of the factory -- it's Fox's scheming lover's father who gets the business bankrupt, and it's Fox, after he lends his lover money to get them out of debt, who screws up the printing. But Fox isn't humiliated by his mistake, whereas a blind, helpless Bjork in "Dancer in the Dark" is made to be a pitiable object. (To be fair, both Fassbinder and von Trier have a tendency to wallow in the miserable.)
Fassbinder focuses his film mainly on the class barrier -- Fox's lover makes insulting comments to him regarding proper manners -- but he's also giving us a kind of gay relationship film noir -- we see ex-lovers kissing (in a ceiling mirror!) behind current lovers' backs, and money corruption plays a large part in the film. (Fox's lover is excellent in his role; he never plays a character who's sole purpose for living is to plot in a corner about how he'll be evil today.) And Fassbinder's view of society as something that destroys people is very noirish (Fox isn't completely in the dark; he does understand he's being used as it's happening). But to be sure, Fassbinder is also detailing the upper-class homosexual in a very critical way; but I think he could have done much more exposing the shallowness of gay culture. (He mainly treats Fox's lover and his ex-/secret lover with peeking-through-keyhole disdain, no doubt partly from Fox's perspective, but I find that somewhat childish and not terribly interesting. It's the view of someone who's been screwed over and feels depressed about it, not someone intent on exposing why people are corrupt, and how.) You don't know quite how to feel about this; in a way Fassbinder is very brave -- he casts himself in an incredibly unromantic role. And at the same time it's interesting because, while Fassbinder doesn't seem too pleased with the superficial manner of the gays whose eyes immediately fixate on money and looks, his own film features an abundance of male nudity early on, of young, very attractive boys that Fox himself is quite attracted to.
On a more technical aspect, there are plenty of interesting shots, of reflections, or obscurities, or of the backs of heads or bodies; one particularly stand-out scene is the one where Fox and his lover are vacationing in Morocco and cruise for a man, and when in a taxi with him the camera observes the festival around them while we listen to their discussion. (The man they pick up is Ali from "Fear Eats the Soul," and many of Fassbinder's stable appear in the film. The fact that it's Ali playing a Moroccan -- albeit, one that's ostensibly gay, so it may not in fact be Ali -- gives the film a self-referential bent, though it's never gimmicky; rather, a continuous web of obsessions; there is a comment on racism inputted in this scene, as well.) The ending of the film is a bit too cruel and heavy-handed, though the pessimist in me appreciates it, the part of me that believes society is a pitiless social system out to wreck anything with a pureness of soul. 9/10
14 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-
Fassbinder's finest performance?, 1 May 1999
Author: Lexo-2 from Dublin, Ireland
Fox and his Friends caused some controversy when it was first made - it was thought that this story of a gay sideshow worker who wins the lottery, only to be exploited to the hilt by his upper-class lover, was potentially homophobic. Fassbinder himself commented that the story could have been about a heterosexual relationship, but it wouldn't have been as clear.
Fassbinder himself plays Fox - the burly ugly duckling of German cinema miraculously slimmed down, looking almost handsome. Fox's street skills and good humour are undercut by his naivety, as his repellently snobbish boyfriend systematically scams him out of the thousands of marks he's won on the lottery. The story proceeds with ruthless inevitability, as Fox becomes more and more demoralised. Yet the film contains some of Fassbinder's sharpest comedy, particularly in a brilliantly embarrassing dinner party scene. RWF is excellent in the title role; amazing to think that the guy who wrote and directed the film (among so many others) could play a good-natured dimwit with such conviction.
10 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

One of my favorites, 7 December 2002
Author: Itchload from Massachusetts
Fassbinder is an acquired taste in every sense of the word. It took me awhile to be able to fully digest and appreciate his films, and even then it can be difficult.
Fox and His Friends is one of his "accessible" movies, but Fassbinder at his most accessible would probably highly alienate most movie goers.
I've seen this movie 3 times. The first time I thought "that was a good Fassbinder". The second time, I thought the same. The third time, I realized it was brilliant. It might be because I recently bought the amazing dvd, which has an excellent transfer. Fassbinder made his films quickly, very quickly, so a faded old videotape sometimes seems to reflect that. However, when seeing the crisp DVD I realized just how great the camera work was and how well-planned out the movie was.
This would make a good starting point for entering the world of Fassbinder I would think, it has it all: well-framed shots, black humor, and an extremely depressing ending. Depending on how much you can relate to this sort of thing, I would recommend checking it out.
p.s. The last scene was later homaged in My Own Private Idaho (another great movie) and Fassbinder gives a really good performance in the lead.
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

A Tale of Deceit, Power, and Victimization: Fassbinder at his Best!, 6 August 2006
Author: gradyharp from United States
Rainer Werner Fassbinder has long been honored as the 'bad boy' in European cinema, a writer/director/actor who repeatedly has taken chances and because of his brutal honesty has succeeded in making a stream of important films. FOX AND HIS FRIENDS dates back to 1975 and remains one of Fassbinder's most successful films. As with all of his films, Fassbinder deals with the homosexual subculture in Germany but his main message goes far beyond the characters he creates: the examination of how people manipulate people for personal gain and the destruction that produces is a recurring problem and one that this film certainly explores.
'Fox' - a nickname of Franz Bieberkopf - (acted with consummate skill by Fassbinder himself) is a lower class gay carny kid whose lover is arrested, leaving the carnival to collapse and leaving Fox without support. Enter handsome Max (Karlheinz Böhm), a wealthy antiques dealer, who picks up Fox, helps him buy the requisite 'lottery ticket' on which Fox bases his hopes for financial survival (!) via manipulative means, and takes him home, introducing Fox to his gay friends who regard Fox as scum but show obvious physical attraction to his rawness. Surprisingly Fox wins the lottery and suddenly has 500,000 DMs and with his new money, Max's friends abruptly see a target for obtaining that money. One of the friends named Eugen (Peter Chatel) takes Fox in as a lover and talks him into investing in Eugen's family business of bookbinding. Eugen's father Wolf (Adrian Hoven) and mother (Ulla Jacobsson) tolerate their son's life with a low class wretch, ridiculing his manners and lack of culture and education, but willingly take his money to salvage their business.
With a lover and a business and a role model to make him suave, Fox dons fancy clothes, banters with his old friends in a tawdry club, and makes the pretenses that at last he is secure and happy. But in time Fox is blamed for problems at the business and when his funds have been depleted on expensive vacations and apartments by the smarmy self-centered Eugen, Fox realizes that now without money he has no 'fancy friends', no lover, no security and his life becomes unbearable: the ending to the film is a tragedy beyond description.
Some would say the film is mannered in ways that depict stereotypes of the gay world (effeminate men, transvestites, opportunists, hustlers, etc), but Fassbinder is completely honest in his attempt to recreate a subculture of a specific time in Germany. And the characters are well written and well acted allowing us to look at Fassbinder's greater picture of depravity between social class antipathies. In many ways this is a difficult film to watch, but Fassbinder wisely places the main character whom he enacts in a place where his foibles and lack of higher class knowledge can be at once very humorous as well as pitiable. FOX AND HIS FRIENDS has some minor flaws but it has already become a classic in gay cinema repertoire. In German with English subtitles. Grady Harp
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

One of Fassbinder's Best, 23 March 1999
Author: harry-76 from Cleveland, Ohio USA
"Faustrecht der Freiheit" occupies a valued place in my video collection. I find myself returning to it again and again, thoroughly enjoying Fassbinder's talent, which run throughout the film. Perceptive, witty and challenging, this drama provides astute observations on societal motivations, political aspirations and, above all, human nature.
9 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

How to get exploited by your rich lover., 26 August 1999
Author: Mithras-4 from Germany
One of Fassbinder´s most sad, dramatic films. Very 70´s and interesting. The gay theme must have been very provocative in these times. But if you want to watch another, even more gay film by him, watch his final movie "Querelle" (after the novel "Querelle de Brest" by Jean Genet). For me this one is a ´9´.
9 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-
Fassbinder is excellent., 30 May 2003
Author: Josh Klein (Quirky-) from Sydney, Australia.
The ironically titled Fox and His Friends, Fassbinder's rather excellent study of a none-too-bright circus worker who wins a small fortune in the lottery, is a touching film that features a great performance from Fassbinder himself in the title role. A reflection on the class system and homosexual relationships of 1970's Germany, Fox and His Friends is unsentimental and guileless most of the time. Fox (Fassbinder) is one of the main attractions of a circus like festival, with his lover being arrested for tax fraud. Fox somehow knows he'll win the lottery, so when he picks up a wealthy man at the local 'pick-up toilets', Fox makes sure he reaches the store in time to lodge his ticket. Cut to Fox celebrating his 500 000 marks win, he's drinking in his usual tavern with the effete bar staff and clientele. Fox then somehow becomes involved with a somewhat arrogant and pretentious man, already in a relationship, who takes the naïve Fox for a ride, spending his money in selfish and extravagant ways. Fassbinder's melodrama is droll and poignant, with a tragically ironic ending. Oh, and you have to give extra marks to a director who inserts lengthy nude scenes of themselves in their films.
9 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-

Fasssbinder at his best, 28 August 2001
Author: anemoni from Greece,Thessaloniki
A powerful and harrowing melodrama and one of Fassbinder's most accessible movies,this is a must-see for all those interested in intelligent filmmaking.The tragic story of Fox is masterfully and poignantly handled by Fassbinder, while never slipping into sloppy sentimentality.At the same time the film explores sexual and political issues that are still very much relevant.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Another Memorable Fassbinder's film, 1 September 2007
Author: Galina from Virginia, USA
In "Fox and His Friends" (1975) which Rainer Werner Fassbinder wrote and directed, he played a main character, Franz Bieberkopf alias "Fox", a lower class, uneducated circus worker who loses his job when his lover, the circus owner is arrested and sent to prison for tax fraud. Fox believes in his luck and strikes it rich by winning 500,000 marks in the lottery and very soon attracts the attention of an elegant, posh, and sophisticated Eugen who knows very well how to make Fox pay for his expensive habits and how to make him invest a lot of money in his father business that is not very successful to say the least. What fascinated me the most - how convincingly Fassbinder - one man production company who came up with the idea, wrote the screenplay and directed the movie- played seemingly tough but as it turned, confused and vulnerable Fox. Another interesting aspect of the movie is the way Fassbinder describes the gay community in Germany of the early 70s. He does not make any excuses and he does not make his characters complete villains or innocent victims. The story he tells could've happened in any community.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

Boy wins lottery, boy loses himself, 2 September 2003
Author: Rogue-32 from L A.
This is the first Fassbinder film I've seen, thanks to Francois Ozon, whose adaptation of Fassbinder's play Water Drops on Burning Rocks turned me on to him. After seeing Fox and His Friends, which stars Fassbinder, I most definitely want more. The story here is familiar - 'loser' gets to win big time and discovers how quickly people are willing - and able - to exploit him. It's the way the piece is written and performed that elevates it above predictability; there is a certain tongue-in-cheek quality to the proceedings that make it thoroughly captivating, through to the bitter end.
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