The film is based on the best-selling Italian novel about how gangsters manipulate the lives of Neapolitans from head to toe. But different from the traditional gangster theme, interest struggle, or the righteousness of the rivers and lakes, or the gangster, here, either from the front or from the side, you can see the powerful depth and bloody ruthlessness of the gang. The use of hand-held cameras, the shaky images, and the absence of outside music make it so real that it doesn't look like a movie. The performances of non-professional actors and the documentary style show the zero distance between film and life. There are only deliberately carved pictures, gloomy, grim, slums, dance halls, farmlands, exchanges, and even the charming waters of Venice are gloomy and mourning ships, which set off the omnipresence of gangsters from beginning to end.
The structure of the film seems to be messy, and it is advanced by five lines intersecting, but behind the five lines all involve the gangster Gomorrah. One is a little boy named Toto, who delivers food and daily necessities to the gangster neighbors. When it's cool, trim your eyebrows in the mirror. Aspiring to be a member of a gang, dressed brightly after becoming a member of the gang, but had to become a helper in killing trusted neighbors. I can't help but worry about whether my playmates who have parted ways will face each other in the future.
Tailor Pasquale, in order to make some extra money, accepted the Chinese proposal to teach workers how to make new clothes. But enduring the cramped space and bumps in the car's trunk, he passed through the area controlled by Gomorrah and nearly died. Interestingly, some people say that Italians don't like competition. Sure enough, the Chinese wanted to take a share of the Naples fashion market, but they took their lives. What's more interesting is that Pasquale said that Chinese people can actually cook, and the fish fried is simply delicious, which reminds me that Chinese food may still have a long way to go abroad. This is off topic. The most interesting thing is that in the end Pasquale's clothes were worn on Scarllett Johnason's body, which is extremely ironic in comparison.
College student Roberto, following Franco to work for a waste disposal company under Gomora, their main task is to travel and negotiate contracts, and then bury toxic waste under farmland, quarries, or transfer to barren areas in Africa for destruction, making the Many innocent people get sick. A small detail is worth mentioning. The old woman was still working in the field in the rain, shouting an unintelligible name and giving Roberto a basket of peaches, but was stopped by Franco on the side of the road and asked to throw away the poisonous peaches. White space is enough to make people think. Let’s make an assumption that Italian food is famous all over the world. If we zoom in on peaches, we can see that the food that symbolizes the whole of Italy has been contaminated, and Gomorrah’s influence can be seen. And the director said with concern and concern that Roberto did not follow Franco all the time.
Don Ciro, the moneymaker, distributes "red envelopes" to the families of those killed in gang fights or imprisoned. He was originally an outsider who ran errands and didn't want to get involved in the battle, but he accidentally stepped into the battle between the two factions, wearing a body armor and trembling. In order to save his life, he took risks alone, and wanted to have a "chat" with the leader of another faction - also a former brother - but friendship is obviously very far away, and his life can only be exchanged for money. In gang disputes, neutrality is not only extravagant, but also life-threatening. It can be seen from the side that ordinary people are affected by Gomorrah. By the way, the scene where the money was robbed was filmed in a tense and orderly manner, with a strong sense of space and music. One side was the driving road, the speeding car, and the other side was the dark hut and the bloody corpse. In broad daylight, it's appalling, and the comparison can be described as appalling.
The last line, and the only two boys in direct conflict with Gomorrah. They deliberately discovered Gomorrah's weapons, sneaked in and stole it, and made a big deal out of it. In the end, they got into trouble and were designed by the gang, and they didn't know why they died. Here is also a detail. It was a huge bulldozer that carried the bodies of the two people away. The huge machine was used as a tool to transport the bodies. It was indifferent and skillful.
Personally, I think that if you want to shoot new ideas on this subject, you must not be chronically ill, but innovation means daring to be the first, and it requires risks. For example, a portable camera, this old-fashioned photography method is more realistic and closer, but the shaking picture is also Lost a lot of viewers.
Finally, I have to mention that the subtitles at the end of the film are appalling, so you might as well write it down and revisit it:
"The Camorra group has committed more murders than all other criminal organizations in Europe combined. In the past 30 years, 4,000 people have died at the hands of the Camorra, an average of one murder every three days." Scampi Asia has become the world's largest drug trafficking site, with an average daily drug revenue of about 500,000 euros per gang. The total depth of the gang-controlled waste landfill is about 14,600 meters (8844 meters high on Mount Everest), and cancer in the toxic waste landfill area The attack rate has increased by 20%. The illegal black money obtained has been remitted to legitimate investment transactions around the world, and the reconstruction of the World Trade Center Twin Towers in New York has involved funds from the Camorra Organization.”
http://yanhaibing.blogspot .com/2008/12/blog-post_08.html
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