Best Avengers Award Winner-Big Villain

Garry 2022-01-02 08:02:26

I haven't read the original version, but this way of revenge is really wonderful and perfect, and it is a complete fit of body and mind.
The two men in the play are both victims and villains. I don't know how to look at his behavior, but one knows the cause of his hatred from the beginning, while the other doesn't understand until the end.
After reading it, I understand that destroying the enemy's body is really weak. The real ruthless person is to destroy the enemy's soul.
One lives with desperate revenge, and the other lives with hope revenge. It is not easy to live. In the end, both of them are shrouded in despair, but one committed suicide, and the other imprisoned himself, who was worse than death.
Suddenly, I felt that the two people who had revenge were very "kind" and very "vulnerable". The toughness was only external, and their hearts were already torn apart. They even couldn't stand the crimes they committed but were still committing crimes.
The chaos is spurned, but the villain does hope to have revenge through a "same empathy" approach. Although the protagonist has the most shots, I think the villain’s heart is the biggest bright spot.
The big villain is a poor man. The whole family is spurned, living in pain and unlovable. As a rich second generation, it is simply too easy to die a downfallen enemy, but his way of revenge is sublimated and full of Literary Fan.
Suddenly, he thought of the martial arts "fighting the stars and moving" of "using the way of the other, and returning the body to the other."

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Oldboy quotes

  • Chaney: Shit, you might wanna think about what you're doing here!

    Joe Doucett: I've been thinking about it for the last 20 years.

  • Chaney: I swear, I don't know nothin'! I swear before God and eight motherfuckin' white people!