Who cares about being a hero sweat

Terrill 2022-09-03 19:52:01

The movie I started watching today, I watched it at 8 in the morning and finished it at 12 noon. He's not the longest-watched of the many movies I've watched lately ("The Revenant" took 3 days to watch), and he didn't do it in one go ("Bottom Spice Girls"). The reason I measure him by the time it takes to look at it is purely because of loneliness. "American Hero" tells the story of Melvin, a homeless man with superpowers, who tries to find the meaning of his existence, but ends up failing. Whether it is the disappointment in life or the pain of losing everything, it is somewhat similar to me now, so when I watch the film, I am more or less venting my loneliness. After nearly two years in the army, I was faced with the choice of retiring from the army or transferring to a non-commissioned officer. Not wanting to stay in the army, but being persuaded by his family in various ways, the feeling of no one supporting him is just like the protagonist, helpless and helpless. In the words of the army, "Even if you have the ability, no one will cooperate with you." Like him, he will also fall, and he has a group of friends who are really good for you, but the only one who can help him escape from this shit life is himself. Melvin also tried to get on the right track, quit everything, exercise every day, drink some drinks that are good for the body, and other positive things. Do you think you can change your mind and be a good person? Do you think you can regain your integrity and be a hero from now on? Wrong, you are already like this. Just be yourself, why do you have to be a hero? Why do I have to be a successful person in the eyes of others, just because I am handsome and smart? When you just want to be an ordinary ordinary person and are denied by others, is there a problem with yourself, or is there a problem with the society?

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