If it weren't for the name of the deadly corner, maybe everyone's rating would not be so low.
First of all, the clear story line is that the black protagonist decided to take a small road in order to visit the trenches of the Civil War. In Virginia, which has a history of being a slave state, he never wanted to kneel down to be willing to be enslaved. There is an intriguing irony about the conflict between the slave states and the free states and the difference in the level of mental development between the now prosperous coasts and inland regions.
Stereotypes about hippies and rednecks, as well as Aboriginal peoples, are also key to the three-way conflict. The general public's stereotype of the country people: extreme xenophobia, feudal and backward thinking; the stereotype of the hippies: idleness, poisoning the society; the stereotype of the aborigines: bloody savage, unscrupulous.
Isn't the Foundation hurting people and lynching people in order to preserve their homes like the world police "Free America" with guns every day?
Black people are enslaved again, white women are controlled by brutal husbands and rescued by their fathers who are also males, the first surviving party of homosexuality to be split up will go to hell, white men are denied the right to speak in court, oh my god this wave Isn't the irony deep enough?
The whole film is about the conflict between the city and the country man, the conflict between the modern man and the primitive man, the conflict between enslavement and liberation. In the end, the heroine left the child and saved the indigenous little girl. The hatred of the previous generation should not spread to the next generation. Liberation is the foundation of the founding of the United States.
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