The satire and teasing of the micro-classic -- a short review of "Crisis"

Adeline 2022-04-24 07:01:04

I just watched "Crisis" starring Channing Tatum and Jamie Foxx. After laughing it off, I wanted to write something, with a small pen and a limited vision. If there are any mistakes, please forgive me. Many well-informed brothers and sisters have already sprayed the BUG of this movie to their fullest, so I won't go into details about it. What I want to talk about is the teasing and irony, humorous or spicy, in the movie, whether implicit or explicit. It's all a little bit of little bridges, but the settings are clever and very endearing. I'm very interested in digging them out and sharing them with you, and listen to me one by one.
At 3 minutes and 46 seconds of the film, the sniper of the Secret Service noticed an abnormal situation and stopped the whereabouts of the president's special plane. A few seconds later, the thermal imaging video was called up, only to find out that it was a pair of sweet partners who were loving each other, and they were nervous. Immediately relaxed, while the audience laughed, it was easy to think that the United States, which claimed to protect the privacy of its citizens, was actually the country that violated personal privacy the most. Take the National Security Agency (NSA) as an example. There has been a massive spy on privacy, as evidenced by the Snowden incident. The placement of this small detail can be regarded as a small mockery of the director's attitude towards the US government.
At 12 minutes and 43 seconds, a word called freedom of the press appeared, saying that a talk show host named Roger Skinner was doing a live broadcast on the South Lawn of the White House, satirizing the president from the college who dared to interfere in international politics. I am very unhappy watching his live broadcast on TV, but there is nothing I can do. We must respect the freedom of the press. The freedom of the press in the film is highly realized, but in reality, American society only enjoys limited freedom of the press. Internally, individual media empires and media The oligarchs have the hegemony of discourse, and the general public can only express their opinions on social networking sites; externally, the American discourse hegemony and the power of the media are known to the people of the earth, and the supreme freedom of the press exists only in movies.
At 28 minutes and 2 seconds, it was said from the president's mouth that the president's wife never had an accurate idea. In fact, she was teasing the real first lady of the United States. She was always unreliable, and she was always late for meetings and events. There are criticisms, and the president himself said this phenomenon in the film, which intensified the dissatisfaction of the people.
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The first post is a test of patience. There are many more, take your time.

In general, this movie has a compact plot, hot scenes, bright characters, and full of laughs. As a commercial movie, it is already very high-grade, and it is very suitable for grabbing popcorn and having fun on the screen when you are lonely and bored. Haha.

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Extended Reading
  • Antonetta 2021-11-24 08:01:24

    The second film that I watched in a month to wash the White House was still very cool, and it fully satisfied our gloomy psychology of watching lively and not afraid of big things. Not as tragic as the fall of Olympus, but the characters are much more plump and interesting, and the scenes are more luxurious and refined. Poor box office is purely bad luck, the title of the theme crashed, and then they suffered a lot.

  • Adam 2022-03-14 14:12:23

    It's pretty stupid to think about.

White House Down quotes

  • Donnie the Guide: Now, not too many people realize this, but the White House is actually three buildings: there's the East Wing, where you guys came in, there's the West Wing, which houses the Oval and Executive Offices of the president, and we're about to enter the residence, which is the big, famous building in the middle that got blown up in "Independence Day".

    Midwestern Woman: What's in there?

    Donnie the Guide: Well, that's the president's home theater. Membership has its privileges.

  • Donnie the Guide: Oil painting by Tom Freeman to commemorate the burning of the White House by the British in 1814.

    Cale: Wait, the White House burned down?

    Donnie the Guide: Yeah, yeah, in the War of 1812. Practically had to be rebuilt from the ground up. When I look at this painting, I get very emotional.