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Randall 2022-03-25 09:01:19
Who is the devil and who rides with
It's just that I can't write a short review, it's not a movie review. The title is something I haven't figured out yet after reading it. Saying "everyone is" is lazy.
Some full shots make people feel that the director really has an imperceptible warmth. The play next to the campfire is brilliantly...
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Loyce 2022-01-17 08:02:23
Justice bounded by the river
"Riding with the Devil" can be regarded as Lee's second only to "The Hulk" movie that suffered a fiasco at the box office. Prior to this, his "Father Trilogy" was nominated or won at home and abroad, which made it famous. Two foreign language films "Sense and Emotion" and "Ice Storm" also...

Scott Sener
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Edythe 2022-03-25 09:01:19
In the 148-minute CC version, Ang Lee still feels comfortable shooting epic stories, but the core is the growth of a boy. In the Civil War, it was not the faith but the devil in the heart that contradicted ourselves and the enemy. The scheduling of the big scene is exemplary, an encirclement shootout and a head-to-head war scene are both classic. Although it is a war, the reflection is outside the play. Jack's freedom after putting down his gun is the meaning of the end of the civil war. At that time, Ang Lee had more humanistic care.
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Weston 2022-03-16 09:01:07
It ain't right, it ain't wrong. It's just what it is. The dualism of black and white is just something that people with ulterior motives create to fool their followers in order to achieve their own goals. Full of stamina. Ang Li said that this is his most underrated work, and he deeply agrees. It is also my favorite of all his movies.
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[Mr. Evans, a Confederate sympathizer, has Jack Bull and Jake as guests]
Jack Bull: Are you saying, sir, that we fight for nothing?
Evans: Far from it, Mr. Chiles. You fight for everything that we ever had... as did my son. It's just that... we don't have it anymore.
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[Camping out, Jack Bull Chiles and Jake Roedel discuss Jake's finger, which was shot off in a skirmish]
Jack Bull: My father's under the dirt to stay. Like that's gone to stay, too.
Jake: My finger?
Jack Bull: Mmm-hmm.
Jake: Well, so it is. And it makes me notable by the loss.
Jack Bull: You sound pleased... as if that finger'd been pesterin' you for rings.
Jake: No. It was a fine finger and I'd rather have it still, but... it was took from me and it's been et by chickens for sure. And I say, what is the good side to this amputation? And there is one.