It is true to punish the wicked and eliminate the evil, but there is no need to use the banner of religion. If I want to kill a wicked person, then I will kill it. The prayers are wonderful, but unfortunately they are more of a joke.
I've never been able to figure out whether these two brothers started their great and harmonious cause of punishing evildoers and eliminating evil since they killed the big Russian guy who went to the bar, or whether the killing was just a small episode in their career. ?
This film is not without merit. First of all, I really like this editing style. The time is deliberately disrupted, and the overlapping of events in different time periods in the same space makes the story vivid and colorful. It's a pity that there are no fighting scenes, and the gunfights are not as relieved as "Mr. and Mrs. Smith". There are neither tons of blood nor tons of bullet casings.
Willem Dafoe's performance really blows my mind. Rather than the film, Willem Dafoe's performance surprised me even more. The gay scene is evil enough, and the cross-dressing image in the back is even more so, and I'm really starting to wonder about this guy's sexuality (the performance in "The Antichrist" makes me very impressed with this guy deep).
Others are full of dark humor. Willem Dafoe listens to classical music (or a portable CD player) while surveying the site, dances like the conductor of a symphony orchestra, and then recreates the crime like a wizard. That posture, as if he was really a conductor.
Of course, Willem Dafoe's tap dancing was also an epiphany.
View more about The Boondock Saints reviews