humanoid loneliness

Floy 2022-03-22 09:02:02

"He's a lone wolf." Allen Dillon in "Lone Killer" is not only a stern killer, but also a humanoid loneliness. This may be a curse, but at the same time it is a state of being sublimated from it.

Just as in this city with staggered offerings, prosperity is just an appearance, and the bottom is full of loners walking on the road. Some people know that they can't escape loneliness but still try to embrace the ethereal noise that will never belong to them. Some people gladly accept to continue to take the lonely train that only belongs to them.

Or, in the end, these lonely people can't escape the fateful and tragic fate. But before that moment comes, let's dance with loneliness.

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Extended Reading
  • Alayna 2022-04-21 09:02:30

    Oops, this kind of suspense film that turns police and gangster films into literary films is the most appetizing! The script edits the soundtrack, creating a very successful atmosphere, slow and detailed, but not boring; I especially like the set, seeing his broken apartment (birds in a big cage), as well as the nightclub and mansion where the murder took place, the spatial relationship naturally exudes Cold and stiff. Although I think Delong is not good-looking in this one, but it is cool and lonely.

  • Fabian 2022-04-20 09:01:48

    Samsung and a half, such a beautiful shot schedule and atmosphere, should be used to make an art film, but ended up shooting such a business script with empty details but a loose structure. Alain Delon's image in it feels like a mix of Tom Cruise and Toshiro Mifune, but I personally don't like this kind of overly restrained performance. Do the French police really dispatch so many police forces for a suspect?

Le Samouraï quotes

  • Jeff Costello: Who sent you?

    Gunman: I can't tell you that.

    Jeff Costello: Yet you could try to kill me. Look at me. I'll ask you just once more. Who? Name and address.

    Gunman: You don't know him; he's not in our league.

    Jeff Costello: Don't keep me waiting.

    Gunman: Olivier Rey... 73, Boulevard de Montmorency.

    Jeff Costello: That's how you became unemployed.

  • Jeff Costello: Trouble?... Because of me?

    Jane Lagrange: No, you've never meant trouble for me.