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Deontae 2022-04-24 07:01:04
This bullshit story is driven by...
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Alvis 2022-04-24 07:01:04
It turns out that violence is contagious and may remain in people's hearts and cannot be...
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Jess 2022-04-24 07:01:04
I don't know why, but the trailer is better...
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Gwendolyn 2022-04-24 07:01:04
Like many Hong Kong martial arts films, the peerless master quit the disputes in the rivers and lakes, but he was hidden in the city but was disturbed by the people in the rivers and lakes, and finally the master used a unique trick to destroy the gangsters. Such a simple story makes Cronenberg much better to tell, and there is a lot of...
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Kiera 2022-04-24 07:01:04
This time, Cronenberg doesn't play with the demons and monsters that are deformed on the outside, but deals with the monsters inside people's hearts, the demons in the hearts of good fathers and good husbands, out of the...
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Haylee 2022-04-24 07:01:04
Definitely Cronenberg's style, the explicit depiction of violence makes you suspect that there are skeletons behind the camera, don't get close if you don't like...
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Yvonne 2022-04-24 07:01:04
When you have to pick up the butcher's knife that has been put down, it is often a different...
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Cade 2022-04-24 07:01:04
Ah, so the martial arts is based on...
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Dee 2022-04-24 07:01:04
Violence and sex at the touch of a button, one of Cronenberg's rare good...
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Bertram 2022-04-23 07:01:31
1. Under such a grand title, Cronenberg shows that violence is the best original solution to problems. Although the father wants to teach his son not to use violence to solve problems, he also knows that many problems can only be solved by violence. 2. Don't tell me that the stupid comedy martial arts film
did not copy or pay tribute to this...
A History of Violence Comments
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[Richie talks to Joey about the business]
Richie Cusack: What am I gonna do? You bust up a made man's place. You killed some of his guys. You take his eye. Jesus, Joey... you nearly took out his left eye. Barbed wire, wasn't it? That's disgusting. You always were the crazy one.
Tom Stall: Not anymore.
Richie Cusack: Yeah, I heard. You're living the American Dream. You really bought into it, didn't you? You've been this other guy, almost as long as you've been yourself. Hey, when you dream, are you still Joey?
Tom Stall: Joey's been dead a long time.
Richie Cusack: And yet here you sit... big as life. You know you cost me a lot of time and money. Before you pulled that shit with Fogarty, I was a shoe-in to take over when the boss croaked. A shoe-in. It was made very clear to me, Joey. I had to clean up your mess, or nothing was ever gonna happen for me! You got no idea how much shit I had to pull to get back in with those guys. You cost me! A hell of a lot, Joey. A hell of a lot!
Tom Stall: Looks like you're doing all right over here.
Richie Cusack: Yeah, I am, I am. I'm still behind the eight-ball... because of you. There's a certain lack of respect, a certain lack of trust. The boys in Boston are just waitin' for me to go down.
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[Tom gets a phone call in the middle of the night]
Tom Stall: Hello?
Richie Cusack: [voice] Hey, Bro-heem. You're still pretty good with the killing. That's exciting.
Tom Stall: Richie?
Richie Cusack: [chuckles; voice] Yeah, it's Richie. What do you say, Joey? Are you going to come see me? Or do I have to come see you?