Sturdy life without explanation

Ward 2022-03-21 09:01:06

I have watched this movie for a few days, and I watched "Rise of the Apes" in the theater on the same day. Today, the plot of the latter is almost forgotten, but the former chatted with colleagues in the car in the morning, and still talked about it, and chatted again in the afternoon. So I couldn't help but write a film review.

In fact, the subject matter is very gloomy. How can a drug addict and an AIDS patient with a sexually licentious life survive, and use his survival skills to make money (as if I don’t remember that I am an AIDS patient), and people’s motives are very complicated. In fact, I am more I would rather think that he wants to help more people who are tortured by AIDS and by the way the "poison" like AZT and those unscrupulous but decent representatives of pharmaceutical companies and ignorant doctors, but male nature does not want to make this kind of help. It seemed too crooked and costly, so he collected some money by the way and started a "Dallas Buyers Club". The annual membership fee of 400 US dollars is not enough for China to have a C-section, okay? What is even more ironic is that AZT announced that their medicine is also a membership system, with a membership fee of $10,000 a year. Okay, you're still ridiculing China's drug prices, aren't you? The U.S. emperor was really unpredictable

yesterday when I saw someone write about the other side of Wang Shuo's unrelenting justice, which few people know about. Some of them wrote about the public trial of Chinese films. In order to pass the public trial, Wang Shuo even asked Wang Shuo to help the public trial. I think of revising the plot-"Let the heroine get pregnant, get pregnant to survive and be safe, enter the Buddhist hall, and rise."

I thought that a film like "Dallas Buyers Club" would definitely not pass the public trial in China. One is that the subject matter is not "sunshine and healthy"-drug abuse, promiscuity, childlessness, and loss of Chinese ethics; second, it is not "submissive" that it praises and attempts to indoctrinate, but teaches submissives how to resist— —Using moral beliefs to pretend to be the godfather, walking on the edge of the law, knowing that his "mess" may be embarrassed by the powerful resources of the Liying Group, so he prevents the patient from seeking legality for his legality first. The remote guard was eventually cut off from the source, but because of unexplainable motives, she ran out of money to rescue others. Whether it’s that he can freely walk around the border a few times, or is looking for a partner for business purposes, or even knows how to hire a lawyer, all life skills, I think, people’s living conditions may be a voluntary choice by others. The persuasion and evaluation of moralists should be saved! Of course, you can also say that this is a perfect continuation of his strong sense of survival, but I really like the male protagonist, those "low to the dust" little people with unclear motivation and kindness, mixed with the unrelenting awareness of survival And ability. Of course I also like that such people can use the current social rule of law to win the recognition of the law and win the lawsuit. I like a truly rule of law and tolerant society. I don’t make moral evaluations of other people, and I don’t give up every humble one. The tenacious effort of the little man.

Take a moment to express the happiness that this film has brought me these days, BTW, the original soundtrack of the movie is really good!

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Extended Reading

Dallas Buyers Club quotes

  • Ron Woodroof: I still got HIV?

    Dr. Vass: You will always test positive for HIV. And now you've got AIDS for all the toxic shit you've put in your body. You've shut your immune system and now you've got chronic leumonia, among other things. It could cause memory loss, mood swings, aching joints.

    Ron Woodroof: So if it sucks, I got it.

  • Ron Woodroof: Do you ever miss your regular life?

    Dr. Eve Saks: Regular life? What is that? It doesn't exist.

    Ron Woodroof: Yeah, I guess. No, I know, I just... I just wanna...

    Dr. Eve Saks: What?

    Ron Woodroof: Ice-cold beer, a little riding in. Well, take my woman dancing. You know? I want kids. I mean, I got one... one life, right? Mine. But sh... Fuck, I want somebody else's sometimes. Sometimes I just feel like I'm fighting for a life I just ain't got time to live. I want it to mean something.

    Dr. Eve Saks: It does.