I think Davewashere made some very good points, but my perspective on the whole things differ a bit.
We can find out the most about John Ryder by looking at his actions. He has no real history that anyone can find, so his actions are the only things available to figure him out. Here is a man who is not a serial killer. He chooses his victims at random and makes no attempts to hide what he does, while wasting no time between kills. He destroys helicopters, police cars, kills tons of police officers and escapes from a prison transport. Along with the lack of information as to who he is, this would indicate a background in intelligence or the military. It doesn't hurt that this movie was made around the time the Rambo movies were very popular.
Everything John does seems to be with total ease. I don't think he necessarily wants to go out with a bang, but I do agree with him wanting to make someone kill him. Part of that may be to take away innocence, but I think John wants to be killed by someone who can actually kill him. The person who kills him should not just be the person who kills him, it has to be the person that can beat him.
I would venture to think that John's military or intelligence background probably took a lot of his humanity and capacity to feel away. Being that he dresses like drifter and this was in the mid 1980's, the assumption I make is that he was probably in the Vietnam war. I would assume his emotions are dulled and there is probably nothing joyful he can find in life. He probably gets further and further frustrated by the amount of violence and death he causes because nothing beats him. His constant antagonism of his victims is an invitation to kill him, which no one is able to do.
My guess is that every single person who he has killed in a car probably repeated the "I want to die" phrase, even though John knew that they did not want to. Jim beat him and exclaimed his will to live and this was not something that John expected. The person who killed him had to be the person who can beat him, and that is what he saw in Jim.
reply
share