The protagonist of this movie is not a hero in the traditional sense, but a murderous murderer. This is very similar to Eastwood's mentor coming to Onne. There are no heroes in the Westerns in Levine, only bounty hunters who are both righteous and evil.
There is also no absolute villain in this movie. On the contrary, Little Bill is just a domineering sheriff who uses an iron fist to maintain law and order. He neither greeted the law nor burned or looted him, his only dream was to build a wooden house, drink coffee and smoke a pipe to admire the sunset.
There is no absolute justice in this movie. The revenge of the prostitutes is the illegal act of violence against violence, and the cowboys killed are just a bunch of simple-minded rough men. And the executors do not act for the heavens—they kill people purely for money.
With such a group of unclearly positioned characters, it is their confused motive that drives the plot.
The protagonist William is a murderer who has reformed his evil spirits. He has changed his mind for his dead wife even without drinking alcohol, and confessed to the atrocities committed in the past. But self-cleaning did not bring him a good life, only turning him into a poor widower, dragging a pair of sons and daughters with no future. "Being innocent and innocent" was just his daydream, and in the end he had to avenge his companions with blood on his hands.
His black companion Ned also had a daydream-a dream of getting rich. It was not until he pulled the trigger that he realized that he could no longer bear the weight of the killing, but this bounty trip made him lose his life when he made money. Go in.
The young Schofield boy, his dream broke more completely. Originally wanted to be a professional bounty hunter, he was completely overwhelmed by the pressure of killing, and finally he didn't even have the courage to raise the gun again.
Police Officer Bill also had unrealistic dreams. He tried to rule the town with an iron fist, and then spent the rest of his life quietly. He couldn't believe he would end up like this when he died-his dream was also broken.
The prostitutes once thought that they could complete their revenge ruthlessly. They rejected the cowboy’s goodwill to apologize and donated all their savings with the same hatred. But when the first cowboy was killed, the pleasure of revenge succumbed to the dazed fear. Not completely ready to kill.
The plot of this story is roughly like this. Everyone has an idealized goal. When the ideal bubble is pierced by reality, there is this ending.
"Deserve's got nothing to do with this." The protagonist finally expressed the true meaning.
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