A Brief Comment on "The Gentlemen"

Diego 2022-03-20 09:01:21

Guy Ritchie's "Gentlemen" really only comes to the UK before he can relate to some obscure points: such as dog skin plasters that can't hide from teenage gansters that can't be thrown off, such as growing marijuana in aristocratic homes (because it's unregulated), such as Media that make great use of imagination, such as black Americans (but this time the Americans are Asian faces), such as national YouTubers... It's quite obscure, the British gentleman's way is not shaken by hostile forces, but old and new media, nobody cares about your business, they only care about your story! Sometimes it saves your life, but it's not to save you, but to shoot YouTube haha. In general, Guy Ritchie went round and round and returned to the original "Two Smoking Guns" routine. The multi-line mesh narrative, although not as stunning as his debut novel, is deadly, and his pictures are too beautiful.

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Extended Reading

The Gentlemen quotes

  • Rosalind Pearson: He's a fox, and foxes have a predictable nature. Trust this Jew about that Jew. If you let him in the henhouse, you can expect blood and feathers everywhere.

  • Matthew: How does anyone grow fifty tons of super skunk without letting anyone else know how they do it?

    Mickey Pearson: I'm flattered to hear that from you, Matthew. I imagine that big brain of yours is sweating a stream of tears just trying to figure it out.

    Matthew: Brilliance should be acknowledged