I wanted to watch this movie a long time ago, but I have never had a chance. What impressed me the most after watching it today was not the headshot of the microwave oven, but the beauty of human nature. The protagonist cares for her friends at a critical moment. The only woman in the criminal gang shed tears for the two girls. The heroine’s parents completely let go of what they can’t do as a legal citizen in a critical moment—killing, for their daughters. It is the biggest highlight of this movie. Justice always triumphs over evil. This is what everyone wants to see. For an audience, the heroine and her friends are ravaged by bad guys in the first half of the movie. So in the second half, I naturally hope to have a turnaround-use violence to control violence, which is also a kind of psychological comfort, then after the heroine’s parents finally kill everyone, calm music, quiet lake, When the heroine's family took Justin to sit quietly on the yacht, everything that was bloody just now seemed to have never happened, but the pain may never be erased.
It is worth mentioning that the boy Justin in the film is cowardly, weak, and timid. He deeply feels guilty and self-blame for hurting these two girls. He blames himself that he shouldn’t bring them back to the hotel, and he is more self-confident. Blame his incompetence, but what is wrong with him! He just lived in such an unbearable environment, his father was such a cruel, cold-blooded, unsympathetic guy, he even had no mother’s care since he was a child (this also reveals the importance of our family environment to a person’s growth), But in the end he finally made up his mind and made his position clear. He wanted to end all this. Although the shot was not fired, he finally defeated his timidity and cowardice. For this he almost lost his life. . As the only person in the gang who survived, all he had were the light spots in human nature. In the end, he sat on the yacht and returned to a normal life with the heroine. No matter what kind of pain, life will always move forward.
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The Last House on the Left reviews