Excellent movie. The plot is ups and downs, but it is not slow and slow. Before the Golden Ho Awards, it was a large-scale mining industry show with a strong I-type personality, with the theme of believing in the American dream, and even a real dream, a dream. The embodied American dream. True love left, and Mike's sadness when he saw Wales' acceptance speech added to this conviction. The original belief, blind belief, and dream-seeking belief were superimposed on layers of factual basis. But the last look that turned around, the jealousy that I thought was a small footnote in a grand narrative, and the rest is up to you, Wales. Dreaming of acting, the original intention started from the lobby of the Jakarta hotel at the very beginning of the film. I seek gold, not money, the great oath of this dream. As for whether Wales was involved, performed to the fullest, or was completely unaware and caught off guard, I think it didn't matter that much the moment I saw the napkin contract. It turned out that the contract that blocked half of it at the beginning was: whatever it takes! This is the second half of the dream sentence, the unremitting pursuit. Welsh and Mike also made up a complete one: half of the dream, the eyes looking at the blue sky, the other half of the hard work, the feet on the road.
In the last shot, I was convinced that Wales leaned on the motel door frame and said: You look for bauxite, but find copper, I look for gold, but find friends.
In addition, why do top liars have to be called mike?
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