Did they intentionally make her retirement a metaphor for "death" (constant emphasis on her absence and the ghostly image at the end) or am I just trying to read too deeply?
The ghostly image was always there, that's what Brian always saw on the track. Similar to Café and her friend. She dissapears once Brian realizes she already surpassed her
They're still referencing that in a way, just with Brian doing that to herself. Bear in mind that Brian is a person here, and if her trainer tried to abuse her like that she'd just fire them, the story wouldn't work even if they wanted to go that route
Also, there's seem to be a misinterpetation with some people thinking Umas only represent the real life horses.
While in reality they get their personality from the horse, jockey, trainers and owners
The ghostly image was always there, that's what Brian always saw on the track. Similar to Café and her friend. She dissapears once Brian realizes she already surpassed her
Also, there's seem to be a misinterpetation with some people thinking Umas only represent the real life horses.
While in reality they get their personality from the horse, jockey, trainers and owners
I'm no expert on this, but I've heard that some characters have references to famous jockeys in their personalities. But I don't remember the details very well.
Also, there's seem to be a misinterpetation with some people thinking Umas only represent the real life horses.
While in reality they get their personality from the horse, jockey, trainers and owners