1. The story ends at a funeral, hovered over by a surreal balloon, from which hangs a fancied female acrobat. 2. But Jane Hirsh is refusing to let the story end there. 3. But the reader is sorry to see their story end. 4. Nor will the story end on Capitol Hill, since President Clinton can veto spending bills. 5. Points of view swing from speaker to speaker and many of the stories end abruptly. 6. The story ends there, and it is up to Hitchcock, in his epilogue, to provide the retribution the crime deserves. 7. The story ends with him turned around by the faith of Fremont Older, and the mercy of a San Francisco judge named Frank H. Dunne. 8. The story ends back in the daylit restaurant, a startling return to the real world that suggests how completely the film has carried its viewers away. 9. Well, in the end the story worked out as fairy tales do. 10. Where does a news story end and a paid-for-drama TV event begin? |