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Chelsea 2022-03-20 09:01:26
【A-】After watching this film, I feel more and more that Cronenberg's skills are profound, and there is almost no waste scene in the whole film. The opening sequence of a long shot, the introduction of the main characters, the jumping and extension of objects and backgrounds within the frame, and the occurrence of events outside the frame, the rhythm of this segment is perfectly controlled. The subsequent second indoor shot follows the killer, and through subtle arrangements, we find another...
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Jaunita 2022-03-20 09:01:26
The apparent is a history of violence, the invisibility is the violent history of history, time (the history of the movement) so violent that the future can use it to obliterate the past itself, every time Tom The combination of fists and feet kills like numbness, as if he was kicking Joey, who had been sunk into the well by him and now slowly climbed up again and again, and when faced with the family's questioning, his eyes were fixed. Yan's expression becomes more secretive in the close-up...
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Bobby 2022-03-19 09:01:03
Slow rhythm but punch to the...
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Aliza 2022-03-19 09:01:03
don't like it very...
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Braden 2022-03-19 09:01:03
8.8 is too cool, the script is excellent enough, and even played tricks in Conan Borg's hands. One second everyone was calmly chatting, and the next second, they were arguing and shooting each other. Uncle Vigo is so handsome! (In other words, it's actually a manga change, go to the original...
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Jaylen 2022-03-16 09:01:03
Why do I suddenly think of Alan...
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?