When Dussander is arrested in the hospital, the movie displays a newspaper article which reveals that Dussander was independently wealthy, and lived off of a "small personal fortune", seemingly to explain how Dussander was able to live by himself with no outward source of income. In Stephen King's original story, Dussander's wealth is explained one step further: namely, that in the 1950s, he had bribed a banker in Maine to purchase stocks and bonds under an assumed name. Dussander would later tell Tod Bowden that the banker's name was Andy, and was later sent to prison for killing his wife. The banker was in fact Andy Dufresne, the main character of "Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption", also by Stephen King.
Scritto da il 05-03-2025 alle ore 07:47

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