Watch it in one go, and then fall into a moment of contemplation that lasts longer than the 110 minutes of the movie.
First of all, I sigh that American films can criticize the real social status quo so freely, ridicule the most sensitive social issues, and criticize the dark side of their own country. Therefore, a country with strong humanities disciplines has been created, and different voices will trigger social trends of thought and people from all walks of life.
Many years ago, I also learned some American history superficially, and I also visited the Grand Canyon Indian Reservation in the West. Now I still have the dream catcher I bought there on the car. Undoubtedly, as the indigenous Indian people, they are called barbarians, an uncivilized race, but they were blocked by civilized people to the edge of the harsh living environment in the west, and continued to live a more barbaric and hard life, and the more difficult life is probably thousands of years. The pain of losing a home in this part of America.
The film, borrowing a real murder case, satirizes such a survival situation and racial issue; it should not be defined as a suspense film, but more of a metaphor for the humanities and historical conditions of the United States.
The Indian girl repeatedly emphasized in the film ran 10 kilometers in the snow and ice, which also alludes to the strength and bravery of the Indians, and when flashing back to the murder scene, the girl and her boyfriend had a brief conversation about where to live. The beautiful vision is also a true portrayal of people's hearts at that time: walking out of this snowy land and heading towards a civilized society.
The film made me marvel at the snow, the imprisonment that traps people's hearts, and the bravery of the girl to break through the cage, just as Uncle Hawkeye and Scarlet Witch said at the end, "Take this spirit and go back to heal your wounds."
It has nothing to do with luck, here, there are only life and death, like wild animals, just to live well
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