ANSWERS: 4
  • Women do not hire him to kill them. Sorry, but that's ridiculous. He is a sub-character of the original "novels," and adds only artistic flair to the movie. His placement in the start is only to identify him as an assassin (we never know who the woman was "running from"), and thereby shroud the second killing (at the end of the movie) in mystery. Miller (the creator) fought to keep the scene into the movie-version, for he had always liked the dialogue of it, and it was Hartnett's performance that convinced him to give shooting rights to Robert Rodriguez (the director). So, without this scene, there would have been no Sin City.
  • he was a hitman but his character had no real purpose in the movie, the beginning scene was just used as a demo for the actual movie and the producers liked it so much they decided to start of the movie with that scene, he also appeared in the end to foreshadow what happens to Becky
  • Sin City is an awesome movie, defiantely one of my favorites.

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