In Primal Fear he is a timid, weak kid who turns into this angry tough guy at times. At the end you find out there was no weak kid, he was always that angry tough psycho pretending to be the weak kid.
Similar in Fight Club, he was nuts and had a split personality.
Yeah... okay, so we might have something like that with Nikki/Jessica.
But, with the grave that was spotted, with Jessica's name, people are totally wondering.
Is that really Nikki? Was that Jessica who died, or was it a cover up, and she's been living as Nikki to hide her true self? Did something bad happen (traumatic) to her that caused Jessica to create the personality of Nikki, so that she wouldn't have to remember the violence, etc.... ?
:::>^..^<::: ~*~The Journey is more important than the end or the start~*~ :::>^..^<:::
Heroes: A Preview of Tonight's Mid-season Cliff-hanger!
by Michael Logan
They fly. They regenerate. They read your thoughts. But can the superpowered freaks and geeks of NBC's Heroes do battle with Fox's monolithic 24? Come January, the two megahit serials will go head-to-head, so Heroes creator Tim Kring is jam-packing his Dec. 4 mid-season finale (airing tonight at 9 pm/ET) with several seismic shocks, including the death of a character, a hero turning traitor and a prophetic painting of Hiro (Masi Oka) raising a sword to do battle with a gigantic... OK, we won't give it away. But here's what we can tell you:
· Before Heroes goes into repeat mode (it returns Jan. 22 with new episodes), Kring promises lots more insight into what — or better yet, who — is the bomb that will nuke Manhattan. "We've introduced Sprague [Matthew John Armstrong], who is radioactive and seems to be getting worse," Kring notes. "But we'll posit another theory that it's Peter [Milo Ventimiglia]. He's having so much trouble absorbing the powers around him that he goes into a coma."
· A hero "will be seduced into the web of Horn-rimmed Glasses," Kring says of Jack Coleman's character. But Kring admits this may not ultimately prove as traitorous — or tragic — as it sounds. "We're keeping things ambiguous with H.R.G. There's a lot of uncertainty as to just how bad he really is, or where his allegiance really lies. He seems to be a very loving father, so the audience should feel torn about him."
· Someone with superpowers will die. But it could have been much worse, Kring claims. "We originally intended the Grim Reaper to come sooner and more often. In fact, we started out with a couple of the heroes already on the chopping block." What saved them? "Every actor and character is working so well that it's been hard to let anyone go. Still, killing this [character] will generate a tremendous amount of story."
· But does death on Heroes really mean death? What with the flashbacks, the wild dreams and Hiro's ability to time-jump, might we see the doomed star again? "There is a fluidity to our show," Kring concedes. "People can come and go... and reappear."
· The show will gain a hero, too. Claude, an invisible man played by British actor Christopher Eccleston (Doctor Who), appears Jan. 22. "He's been living with his invisibility for many years and has come to grips with it, so he'll give us a different view into this hero world," Kring explains. "He's big, imposing and charismatic, and will become a mentor to Peter — albeit a tough, reluctant and stern one. He'll help Peter learn to use and control his powers."
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