At the end of the film, when Jeff Bridges squeezed his pistol and walked into the farm, the back of Toby, who was staring at him, looked like a jaguar squatting in the wild grass waiting for prey. "Living like a leopard" can be regarded as one of his brother's last words. Yes, the weak eat the strong, the law of the jungle. When ancestors and ancestors suffer from poverty for generations, wives and mothers die, and even their homes are at stake, desperately fighting to the top of the food chain is the only way out. Depressed and unhappy all the way, Toby, who feels a little like following his elder brother's soy sauce, forced Grid to rise to the ceiling in the final conversation with the retired sheriff.
The idea has changed, but it is not out of line. Photography takes the path of the wounds in Western films. The episode is even more splendid, and it is as appropriate as the subtitles of the silent film era. Winning such acclaim also sees the negative aspect of America's hostility today. Seeing this film earlier, I knew Trump would win without any suspense.
View more about
Hell or High Water reviews