Reeves' ambition

Clay 2022-08-19 05:31:42

The film has returned to life very well, there are not so many magnificent things and exaggerated acting skills in life.

Some are just ordinary, because life is like this, smooth your edges and corners a little bit.

So changing the calling card is so plain, there is no hand shaking. So although it is smuggling, there are not so many bullets.

A very ordinary movie, let alone what it alludes to, it will live, there is always a lot of helplessness, because mortals, so there are not so many heroic feats. The male protagonist looks cowardly, but in his bones he is actually resisting something. Once in a tavern, it seemed to be pretending, but it won the favor of the hostess. Another time in the forest, I traded my life for the peace of the heroine. In fact, the male protagonist is paying for his cowardice.

So when the black boss asked the male protagonist to "bow worship" and ask the female protagonist to blow him. There is no unexpected male lead runaway, or wit to save the field. Because of life, there is always a lot of helplessness that you can't handle. The hero shouldn't be so wronged, but here is definitely a very good foreshadowing. The male protagonist finally chose to save the female protagonist by death. Is it a redemption? In fact, he doesn't need to come back. He is already out of danger. Even if he finds the heroine in the end-he will definitely find it, and in order to vent his anger, he will definitely kill the heroine. What does it matter? But he went anyway.

A very plain movie, let alone what it alludes to, this is life, there is always a lot of helplessness, because mortals, so there are not so many heroic feats. The male protagonist looks cowardly, but in his bones he is actually resisting something. Once in a tavern, it seemed to be pretending, but it won the favor of the hostess. Another time in the forest, I traded my life for the peace of the heroine. In fact, the male protagonist is paying for his cowardice.

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Extended Reading

Siberia quotes

  • Boris Volkov: [speaking Russian] Who are you, huh? Who are you

    Pavel: I think he speaks Russian.

    Boris Volkov: In heaven, we'll all speak Russian, no?

    Lucas Hill: In hell, too.

    Boris Volkov: [laughs heartily]

  • Lucas Hill: My wife and I are old friends. And sometimes, with an old friend, you learn to squint away certain things, things you'd maybe rather not see.

    Katya: Is it just her doing this, not-seeing, or you too?

    Lucas Hill: The thing about squinting, you can never be certain what you might not be seeing.