■ "Heist (Double-sided Robber)" (U.S., U.K./2017), the 122nd movie this year, a crime drama co-starred by Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Robert De Niro. The movie tells the story of a father who works in a casino and robs a huge sum of money from his accomplices in order to raise a huge amount of medical expenses for his seriously ill daughter. The vast majority of the film is devoted to the content of the gang escaping from the police after the successful robbery. The casino tycoon played by Robert De Niro is treacherous and stingy, but at the same time he loves his own daughter. The father played by Morgan. It truly interprets the definition of paternal love as a mountain of unscrupulous, robbed his own boss and paid a heavy price on the way to escape. This is a crime movie that belongs to the "daughter slave". It ubiquitously promotes the perceptual thinking of family supremacy, and the temptation of working in a casino is at your fingertips, and the indifferent face of humanity is as thin as a piece of paper. The rules of a money tycoon are golden rules, and the flesh and blood of a poor father is the love of the heart. In this way, a contradictory confrontation between family salvation and social codes of conduct spontaneously unfolded in the face of an uncomplicated robbery. The work is full of warmth and violence, and it also has the inherent actions, chasing cars, and fighting scenes inherent in general crime movies. Robert De Niro is just a plot promoter. What really determines the destiny is the difference between the pros and cons regarding money and family affection. Logic of thinking. There are many details of the deviation that have lost the correct social orientation in the film, and there are also suspense and embarrassment defects created to win the sympathy of the audience, but it still has its due watchability and is a must-see for "daughter control". The work is thrilling, and it retains some cautious thinking beyond criminal psychology. [Score: 6.5 points/10 points]
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