As we watched the Dave Hoover walk toward the darkness and hold his gun up in the air, I believe that’s all he did. The gun did not look like it went off. It even sounded like the gun shot was added in later, maybe during editing. We speak in class about this being a key moment about Hoover’s thoughts on what/whoever is going to come after him, and he might not have shot the gun at all. I need to the scene a couple more times, but at the moment I think Morris could have added that significant noise a bit later. Talk about manipulation! We sat in class discussing what it means for Dave Hoover, the lion tamer, to shoot off his gun before walking into the darkness. The only thing I can’t figure out is why he would have lifted the gun if he was not going to shoot. But it just didn’t look like anything happened with the gun, so I’m at a bit of a dilemma. If he was shooting off the gun off, though the one thing that wasn’t mentioned about it is that it could have simply been out of anger; his anger and/or frustration about generations to come. He saw that his successor was good, but definitely needed more training. I bet she did not want his training though, because she was young and thought she new how to do her job the best. Maybe he was shooting off his gun because of that. Many times, people analyze so many things about a film, book, or anything that can be analyzed, and come out with amazing ideas and resolutions. But what about the simple aspects of it all, the ones that get overlooked because they are simple? Sometimes the most straightforward analyzations can be the answer to everything. Not always, but sometimes.