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Emmalee 2022-04-21 09:01:03
This is evil at its most primitive and stupid
The film "Frozen" is based on a true case that happened in Minnesota in 1987 and was directed by Joel Cohen and Ethan Cohen. At the beginning of the movie, the screen was swept and covered by the vast white ice and snow. In the vast white, the gentle melody of the guitar gradually sounded, and...
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Jennings 2022-04-22 07:01:02
Simplicity is our greatest virtue
It seems like a simple story, and I can't imagine how this movie ends when I see the last ten minutes. In the end, a vulnerable woman triumphs over evil, and this ending reminds me of Silence of the Lambs. In the end, when the policewoman caught the criminal, she sighed in the car that it was very...

Larissa Kokernot
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Davonte 2021-10-20 18:58:59
Clumsy pregnant woman, why your accent is so nice! ~Ya Ya! ~
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Bonita 2022-03-23 09:01:03
The story is great, the tall man was planted under the gun, the short man hid the money but was not blessed to enjoy it, his father-in-law loved money but died because of it, and the husband kidnapped his wife but eventually arrested him. Maybe this is the desperate world, but justice will not be late. I love this kind of running account, but it ridiculously amplifies the criminal psychology and consequences infinitely and snowballs and finally loses control of the movie.
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Shep Proudfoot: [to Carl after he inadvertently put a police chief on Shep's trail who's an ex-con] Fuckin' asshole!
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Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Mr. Lundegaard? This is Reilly Diefenbach from GMAC. How are you this morning?
Jerry Lundegaard: [into the phone] Real good. How are you?
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Pretty good, Mr. Lundegaard. I must say, you are damn hard to get a hold of over the phone.
Jerry Lundegaard: Well, we're pretty darn busy here, but that's the way we like it.
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Well, that's for sure. The reason why I've been trying to reach you is that these last financing documents that you sent over to us... I can't read the serial numbers of the vehicles...
Jerry Lundegaard: [getting nervous] Yah, well I already got the money. The loans are in place. I already got the...
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Yah, the 320 thousand... you got the money last month from us.
Jerry Lundegaard: So, we're all set then.
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Yah, but the vehicles that you're borrowing on, I just can't read the serial numbers on your application. Maybe if you could just read...
Jerry Lundegaard: Yah, but the deal's already done. I've already got the money.
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Yah, but we have an audit here and I just have to know that these vehicles that your financing with this money that they really exist.
Jerry Lundegaard: [getting more nervous] Well... they exist all right.
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Well, I'm pretty sure they do, but I can't read the serial numbers here. Maybe if you could read the numbers to me on the first...
Jerry Lundegaard: Yah... well... see... I don't have them in front of me. Why don't I just fax you over a copy?
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] No, no, a fax is no good. That's what I have here and I can't read the darn thing.
Jerry Lundegaard: Yah, I'll have my girl send you a copy then.
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] Okay, that's good. But I need to tell you that if I can't correlate these numbers with those specific vehicles, then I'm gonna have to call back all that money.
Jerry Lundegaard: How much money did you say that was?
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] $320,000. I have to correlate that money with the cars that it's being lent on.
Jerry Lundegaard: Okay, no problem. I'll just fax...
Reilly Diefenbach: [voice] No, no...
Jerry Lundegaard: I mean send it right over. I'll shoot it right over. Good bye.
[hangs up]