The whole film progresses layer by layer, taking us step by step to understand the full story of the story.
I won’t say much about the rest of the movie. Here, I want to talk about why Marquis Warren insisted on hanging Daisy Domog in the end.
In the front of the movie, when they entered the hotel, there was a scene where the British, Daisy Domoge and John Ruth were together. At that time, the British said something that probably meant: "You are because The murder is wanted, and I will be hanged. The difference between me and the private execution of revenge is that I have no feelings and I don’t care what crime you commit. I maintain justice in the law enforcement process. This is a civilized society. With emotions The legal sanctions that endanger judicial justice, and lack of emotion is the essence of judicial justice. "This passage is for Daisy Domoge and John Ruth. I think that the director John Ruth is a metaphor for judicial justice in this movie, because he doesn't care whether it is a man or a woman, he just takes the criminals to the court, sentenced them, and watched them execute the hanging.
Next, I want to talk about black people. The background of the whole movie is that after the American Civil War, slavery was abolished and black people were liberated. However, it is understandable that the blacks still do not receive enough respect. After all, this kind of change takes a long time to change slowly, just as the fake letter said at the end, "Times Progress" Very slowly, but it is someone like you who is pushing the progress of the times.” This letter is also a talisman for Marquis Warren. At least, he can get him on the carriage in this era when black people have almost no status.
So in the end, Marquis Warren executed Daisy Domog by hanging, which is a bit of a link between the past and the next. The hanging is not simply an ordinary hanging in this movie, and it is a metaphor for a true and fair legal sanction.
In the end, the execution of blacks on women by hanging represents the progress of the times, represents equality, blacks get rights, women and men are equal, and the crime is the same. (Marquis Warren was a bit sympathetic to John Ruth for not treating Daisy Domogg as a woman.)
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