The world view is quite like a minority report

Candace 2022-03-19 09:01:03

Bullets turn rounds. Freeman made sense. If no one tells you that the bullets go straight, how do you shoot, follow your will, and return to the original point. This is the source of innovation.
The fight was very exciting, with sports cars turning around to pick up people, and cars turning over and killing people.
The last bullet even went around in a circle, which also symbolized the end of the circle.
There are many small details echoing before and after in the film, and the aftertaste is endless. Breaking the glass and jumping in is the same as rebirth in the pool.
The plot is still old-fashioned. But this film does not need a plot.
The world view is quite like a minority report, but not as rigorous as it is. The nonsense fate loom, how to interpret the binary system, the benevolent sees the benevolence and the wise sees the wisdom, even if the murdered person has criminal desires, it can only be a coincidence. It would be too arbitrary to kill on this basis.

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Extended Reading
  • Justus 2022-03-21 09:01:19

    In countless scenes from beginning to end, our eyes are following the bullets. The blood sprayed, the unimaginable one-way or even two-way ballistic, the exaggerated speed, the hero finally rushed into the smooth gunfight of the Brotherhood Rush, and the pure and violent aesthetics through and through. A little bit of spoof and black humor when setting off the violence makes the whole film more fulfilling and enjoyable.

  • Darryl 2022-04-24 07:01:03

    In fact, there is no destiny in the world, and if there are more people who believe, there will be destiny. Uncle Morgan Freeman engages in corruption in the system, and the sheep male classmates are red-eyed.

Wanted quotes

  • The Butcher: You are a pussy!

    Wesley: I'm not a pussy. I got a healthy respect for the human... condition.

    The Butcher: Fuck that! You are a pussy!

  • Wesley: [after killing first target] What did he do to deserve to die? You don't know. I didn't know if he was bad. I didn't know if he was evil. I didn't know anything about him. We get orders from a loom; fate. And we're supposed to take enough faith in what we're doing is right. Killing someone we know nothing about. I don't know if I can do that.

    Fox: About twenty years ago, there was this girl. Her dad was a federal judge, so she probably had it in her mind that she would follow in his footsteps. So she's home one Christmas, and her dad's on this big racketeering case. The defendant wanted to get a softer judge who they could buy off. So they hired this guy, Max Petridge, to get him to pay her father a visit. And the way he pays people a visit is to break in, and tie up their loved ones, and force them to watch while he burns his targets alive. And then he takes a wire hanger, twists it around, and brands his initials into each one of them so they will never ever forget. After I was recruited into the Fraternity, I found out that Max Petridge's name had come up, weeks before the federal judge was killed, and that a Fraternity member had failed to pull the trigger. We don't know how far the ripples of our decisions go. We kill one, and maybe save a thousand. That's the code of the Fraternity. That's what we believe in, and that's why we do it.