Regardless of the propaganda strength of the poster, the inking of the movie content and the awards submitted, the lawyer Marty played by Richard Gere is the male lead, and the copy on the poster is too childish if it is used to describe Aaron or Roy played by Norton. After all, schizophrenia is nothing new.
More importantly, the film revolves around the case of the Archbishop being murdered and accused of the murderer. Why did the director spend so much time describing the lawyer as a bottomless lawyer who pursues fame and fortune without taking care of the truth. interviews, talk about black and white illicit cases with millions of dollars in pay, and make remarks that no one cares about the truth. And his motive for taking this case was to see a case of celebrity murders on TV, hoping to raise his worth a step further by relying on a major case, and even offered a free agent package to win. He is so unofficial and so arrogant. There is always a personal reporter by his side who does biographical interviews and asks some questions about the soul, which he answers as a matter of course, but in a few meetings, we can also witness the change of the character's point of view... However, the butt decides the position - as the suspect's agent Lawyer, try to prove Aaron's innocence + the scandal of the archbishop + the superb acting of the male lead, make him believe that the male lead is a miserable schizophrenic poor boy, and he himself is a justice fighter who takes nothing, for the sake of Preservation of procedural justice at the risk of overturning the case for a suspect with solid evidence. It is worth noting that when the reporter asked him why he insisted on defending, he said Wei Guangzheng's remarks while blinking frantically, as if he didn't believe what he was saying. Until the truth came out, his three views were completely destroyed. This time, because he even believed in the "good" side, he wanted to cause a perverted murderer who stabbed more than 70 times to be acquitted. This is exactly the sentence on the poster of the film taken from the sentence in "The Scarlet Letter" - Sooner or later, a man who wears two faces forgets which one is real.
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