A person runs to the cinema thinking about a short escape from the world of life. When people who can really talk to each other are not around, I gradually learn to live with an optimistic mask. There are too many things that I can't bear to see, so I can't pretend I can't go on, so I run outside alone, imagining myself as a lone ranger. When the lights are dark in the theater, no one can see anyone, so I feel very safe. I don't really understand the movie never remove your mask. Back to school, there is no absolute same kind in this world at all, just pretending to be the same. People are born lonely and need their own belonging. Everyone just shows a certain side of themselves to different people, or wears a mask.
Pure nonsense, back to the point. The whole movie is just a tear, when the Indian leader was stabbed to death. . . I remember he said: "The white people say this is the progress of civilization. This era no longer belongs to us." And the male protagonist said to the female protagonist at the end (I don't think she is really good-looking): "The train will always go west. Open..." There's nothing to say about the Westward Movement, I just think the world is cruel. . But sometimes I don’t understand, what is the significance of such progress? In the infinite future, we may be like the worthless pocket watch in the film, where did it come from and where did it go. But it does look like a train that can't stop, and like a crazy scary carnivorous rabbit inside.
I don't know what people who say bad movies think, at least I think there are many small details in it that are worth thinking about. . I didn't say anything about the main line of the story, and there are some places where I really want to complain. . For example, the weird marksmanship, the two lone rangers who won't die no matter how they beat and stabbed, the red silk on the ivory thigh, the foreshadowing of the shooting in the middle of the film is really far-fetched. Just grab the part that I find interesting and rub it off.
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