"Life is already so hard, don't expose it (I'm a lunatic)" basically explains what this absurd movie is about.
I often see people on the street who are too drunk and drugged to take care of themselves, in ragged clothes and weird behavior, but they look content and happy. I think most people don't envy this kind of happiness, stay away from such people and take precautions against alcohol and drugs, reminding themselves to live rationally and disciplinedly. Although I firmly believe that the ultimate goal of life is to pursue happiness rather than the stylized tasks of survival and reproduction, I did not choose to indulge myself in another world like these lunatics. Human beings are so contradictory: on the one hand, we admonish ourselves to deal with things rationally and make compromises, on the other hand, we envy and sing freedom; Sometimes I also indulge in my own spiritual world like these drunks, and at that moment I clearly knew that I was a lunatic in the eyes of others. I also changed my position and thought that every seemingly crazy person may just be immersed in happiness that I can't understand.
This actually involves a question of position. I believe that because everyone has different identities, touches different things, and thinks differently, everyone perceives the world differently. This is actually similar to good and evil. This is a movie that stands on the side of a lunatic. Like everyone else in the movie except the protagonist, I, and most of me, pursue happiness while trying not to violate, or even cater to, stylized tasks (such as sophistication, such as universal standards of success). It is difficult for us to touch and reject the life of addiction and self-world, self-defeating and lingering. And to a certain extent, this film endows this humble character with what everyone pursues-the dedication and ideal of love.
So, this is a movie about real "little people", they are the bottom of society, losers in life, and even lunatics who can't be tolerated. They are not necessarily as painful as we think, on the contrary, it is just that we have difficulty understanding their joy. This is a bit of a "sub-non-fish" meaning.
From a larger perspective, "Swiss Army Knife Man" is about the incompatibility between people. Although God has given everyone the same life, this white paper of life will be portrayed by all kinds of life. Eventually it becomes difficult to understand each other. Is there a necessary difference between the most evil and the most wicked people enjoying the evil process and the virtuous people enjoying the noble conduct? In ancient times, princes and generals, and today's political and business elites, wandering between good and evil, would rather be blamed?
Don't criticize yourself, don't be harsh on others, everyone's choice is in line with their own human nature
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