Yesterday, I really felt a bit of a running account for the first hour, and I felt really boring.
Later, I searched the "history" of this film and felt that I still wanted to watch it.
I will watch the next section today, and the more I watch it, the more I feel like I want to know what this film wants to express.
"The lost generation".
The characters of Searle, Dean, and Marilou are deeply rooted in the hearts of the people.
Can't say I understand them. But I love them.
They made a dashing excuse to hit the road, madly broke the moral bottom line, and they felt like they were in heaven with a glass of wine and a cigarette in a cluttered room.
As it says in the film: "They're not tired, they don't care about clichés, they just burn burn burn." What a great deal
.
The real protagonist of this film should be Dean.
There's no road without him, and nothing crazy without him.
Even though his life seems extremely absurd and impetuous, his soul is truly peaceful.
When he abandoned Sell, who had a high fever, and even took their only money, and finally stood in rags in front of Sell, who used to be crazy together, Sell had already lived a mainstream life, but he still still on the way.
Searle didn't take him where he was going.
He said, "Goodbye, Dean." Dean's response was "Dear Searle, I still love you." There is no such thing as a banquet, Searle finally said goodbye to his long-time friend Dean.
When they both had to move away from the deep friendships built along the way and return to the trajectory of everyone's life, their burning dreams still couldn't be quelled. Did they get what they were looking for? Did they experience those longing feelings?
Perhaps, apart from death, no one knows what happened to whom.
View more about On the Road reviews