The American dream is a wall made of wallpaper

Larue 2022-08-03 19:02:38

Although I wanted to say too much, the irony of Invincible Allen still concentrated on stripping off all the coats of the American Dream. Self-actualization, individual liberation, love to save mankind, moral order is a hotbed of hypocrisy, and even psychoanalysis is an eradication of human nature... What is particularly interesting is that the chameleon escaped from the fascist back to the United States and tortured him. Among the former enemies of the United States, there was a warm welcome...Humans themselves are chameleons. I have to say that this is actually an anti-human comedy, with absurd traps everywhere.
Of course, if you think the joke is too cold, he will put on the clothes again with the Hollywood heroic theme for a while. The pseudo-documentary style makes the drama of the layers of cocooning greatly reduced. This film is so serious that I am about to have a diarrhea, I His belly is a bit like that of an intellectual.
In general terms, the serious spoofs in this film include the American government, Hollywood genre dramas, churches, hospitals, political leaders, courts, and the media, and even the literary masterpiece "White Whale" that Americans regard as a brave and pioneering spirit. Don't let it go, almost everything that Americans are proud of has been taken by Sao Rui. (Between the patient and the lawyer, the heroine was very loyal to her professional duties and kind-hearted and chose her patient as her husband. It's damn ironic.)
I didn’t understand how Susan Sontag was tricked into appearing. of.
If you don't understand my nonsense, if there were no doctors and patients like Kafka or Camus in this world before this film, this film may make you exclaimed. All the plot settings are causally interlinked, and it is simply a scripture target.
In particular, the more seriously the people interviewed here express their views, the more you laugh, and this is where Allen is invincible.

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Extended Reading

Zelig quotes

  • Leonard Zelig: [in a hypnotic trance] My brother beat me. My sister beat my brother. My father beat my sister and my brother and me. My mother beat my father and my sister and me and my brother. The neighbors beat our family. The people down the block beat the neighbors and our family.

  • Leonard Zelig: I'm 12 years old. I run into a Synagogue. I ask the Rabbi the meaning of life. He tells me the meaning of life... But, he tells it to me in Hebrew. I don't understand Hebrew. Then he wants to charge me six hundred dollars for Hebrew lessons.