The film set out in the first lesson of "New Film Interpretation". Before I watched the movie, I had a one-sided understanding of hip-hop. I thought it was just a fast-paced and rhyming rap. After watching the movie, I feel that hip-hop in India, a place with serious class concepts, represents a kind of spirit and a kind of liberation.
They use movies as weapons and use movies to reveal the various problems in Indian society. It's a pity that most of the endings of the film in order to create a "temporary utopia" are happy, but in reality it is not the case.
The male protagonist in the movie is not a perfect person either. Although he and his childhood sweetheart have gone to the end, in the process, he has also been attracted by fresh people and new things. He is a passive person, and her girlfriend is a rebel, a rebel, and the same is true of the girl who writes the MV with the male lead. The film also constructs this relationship through space: the male lead sits under the steps when the male and female lead calls, and he always looks up to the female lead.
Social problems have yet to be resolved. I look forward to more movies as weapons, and I hope that these problems can be completely resolved.
View more about Gully Boy reviews