
The Ultimate 1960s Mind-Bender: Why You Need to Watch Mirage (1965)
Unlike modern movies that use memory loss as a cheap gimmick, Mirage uses it to build a suffocating sense of existential dread . You learn the truth exactly as Stillwell does.
Enter (played with perfect frantic energy by Gregory Peck ). He discovers he has no memory of the past two years. He doesn't know why people are trying to kill him, why he’s being followed by a mysterious "Costello," or why a woman he doesn’t recognize claims to be his lover. Why It Works
The Ultimate 1960s Mind-Bender: Why You Need to Watch Mirage (1965)
Unlike modern movies that use memory loss as a cheap gimmick, Mirage uses it to build a suffocating sense of existential dread . You learn the truth exactly as Stillwell does.
Enter (played with perfect frantic energy by Gregory Peck ). He discovers he has no memory of the past two years. He doesn't know why people are trying to kill him, why he’s being followed by a mysterious "Costello," or why a woman he doesn’t recognize claims to be his lover. Why It Works