Two stars, a piece of
Hai Bonnie is lucky, and being lucky makes people jealous. God is so kind to her that she will meet the person who can get her out of her boredom when she is the most bored. Clyde had a slightly sarcastic and heroic face, and even if he tried to steal a car, he still calmly exuded infinite temptation to Bonnie upstairs. Bonnie went downstairs as fast as she could, she followed the handsome car thief, and chatted happily with him, trying to decipher him, like deciphering a book that had never been covered before. Curiosity made Bonnie's eyes linger, and precognition made Clyde's words gradually come true. Clyde's identity has never been deliberately concealed, and it is indeed fully exposed through practical actions under Bonnie's urging. But when the robbery Clyde got in the car instead of accusations, screams, or fear, but Bonnie's passionate kisses, we all knew that their accidental meeting and inevitable love were not to be tolerated Doubtful providence, because they are the same kind of people.
Clyde knew Bonnie well, and Clyde's commentary as he and she sat in a restaurant for dinner made us almost wonder if he checked Bonnie's account or spied on her for a long time. "You're different," Clyde said. Bonnie's eyes lit up as she bid farewell to the past. Clyde said, "Change, so I don't like it." Bonnie changed her hairstyle. She wanted a new beginning, a new beginning that was completely different from the waitress, and the beginning of her way of asura. .
This start was given to her by Clyde. He taught her marksmanship, led her to rob, met new partners with her, welcomed the addition of her brother's family, and then made a brilliant short history of a gang. The tacit understanding between Clyde and Bonnie grows silently like algae, gradually spreads throughout the heart, and finally becomes an inextricable fate. They fell together, with a promise of no regrets to each other. I still remember Bonnie's hearty laughter when the bank Clyde was about to rob was bankrupt; I still remember Clyde's sudden outburst of anger after being spat on by the sheriff; I still remember Bonnie running away When he went to find his mother and was found by Clyde, Clyde was filled with fearful pity as if he had lost it; he still remembered that after they warmed each other's lonely hearts with body temperature on the grass, the world here was sunny and the grass grew long and eagles flew. The last thing to remember is the look back on them when they died. They are beautiful and calm. They are happy and romantic, just like the eternal vow of the old saying that "you can't be born on the same day in the same year, but die on the same day in the same year".
"Love is a sea of two stars, and the hands that hold each other understand that they can never be separated from each other." A simple encounter, a vigorous experience, a life-and-death love. The road to Asura is long and long. Only by leaning on each other and following each other like the wind can we persistently and bravely adhere to the original belief of two people. The moment they went to hell together, they remembered the happy past, and the smile that climbed up the corners of their mouths heralded satisfaction and happiness. be happy, that's fine.
The short mechanic he met on the road
was clearly intimidated at first by the candor of Bonnie and Clyde, who could not have imagined that two well-dressed, high-spirited car owners would introduce themselves as , the bank robber. What surprised him even more was that they would invite him to join in. Facing this provocative invitation, the short man entered the house needlessly and took the money from the station. Clyde smiled and gave him a seat in the car. So simple and dashing, he became their companion. In fact, in the film, the short man is a relatively three-dimensional person, very real and helpless. He will park the windy car to the side because he sees a beautiful woman, so that Clyde kills someone; he will understand the pastor's daughter's sadness and accompany her to go shopping, but it will be chased by the police; He was happy when Bonnie and Clyde escaped, but in the end they couldn't stop the two from perishing because of his father's whistleblower. He is a supporting character, but also has his own personality and ideas. He cherishes friendship, but inadvertently betrays. Compared with Clyde, he was much more confused, maybe he didn't know what he wanted, although he felt very happy with them.
The arrival of Clyde's brother and sister-in-law made the entire gang complete. Clyde's older brother is a cheerful and simple man, who loves his wife and younger brother, and always laughs happily. What I remember most is the cow joke he told. At the beginning, it will be very humorous, but after a long time, you will find that he only tells this joke. When Clyde's brother told the joke to a couple he had just met, the faces of the crowd were much more amusing than the joke he told. But his wife, Annie, is a sensitive, cowardly and emotionally exaggerated priest's daughter, and she makes Bonnie look down upon her very much, causing some minor internal conflicts. Compared with Bonnie, she is more ordinary and useless, especially when the police chase, her high-decibel scream really wants to be kicked and shut up. But in the end, I chose to forgive her, because the fate of this emotional and neurotic woman and her husband was tragic. She was blind and her husband died.
The couple who had their car stolen was a bit of a joke. They started chasing the car thief, then they were chased by the car thief, and then they all got into a car together, almost became friends, but they were finally kicked out vehicle. They carried fear from beginning to end and implied nobility. They couldn't really understand and integrate into this gang of thieves, because from the very beginning, the man's identity in the newspaper office determined the unavoidable confrontation between him and this gang. So they could only be driven out of the car, looking at the distant lights with faint anger and puzzlement.
The cops who oppose Clyde are very cowboy-like. I still don't understand why he had to go to Bonnie and Clyde to die. He'd been with them, he'd read Bonnie's poems, but he couldn't understand them. Perhaps it was because he wanted to take revenge for the insults he suffered and to have the so-called justice that is like hatred. He thought of some ways and used some means to achieve his goal. When he was holding a gun and standing next to the bodies of Bonnie and Clyde, I began to feel that he was not a specific person, but a huge invisible symbol of power, like a government agency of violence or something.
There are still many people who have met along the way. Some of the dead people are indeed innocent. Thinking about it this way, Bonnie and Clyde are also guilty. It's no wonder that after the film was released, the response was great. Because it was an adaptation of a true story, some family members of the deceased protested that the film "beautified the murderer". But after all, this is the way of Asura, and it is not a blessing to meet on the way of Asura. what is that? It's fate.
they have no tomorrow
Bonnie is dissatisfied with her life, and it is when she meets Clyde that her life begins most vividly. Clyde robs banks but doesn't rob poor people's money. He sometimes fights injustice and has his own justice. Bonnie's poems are simple and sad, without gorgeous rhetoric, and indeed all the confusion in the heart. Clyde, angry at his own killing, sat in front of him, the erring short man bursting into tears. They are not ruthless, they are not insatiable, they are always trying to find their own beliefs and all imaginations. What's wrong with this? This is an instinct that people are born with, and finally becomes the hope that supports us to live. Because of this, they are cast aside and hunted down by society, but when this society is so complicated and corrupt that people cannot see the light, are they not qualified to vent their anger and pursue the freedom of self-definition? But what awaits them except betrayal is death, and individual efforts are always no match for the mainstream forces of the times, just like the fish trying to swim upstream and the violet that turned into a rose and died in the wind and rain.
Some of the people support them, and the attitude of the newspapers is sometimes ambiguous. Bonnie and Clyde are said to be amazing, but they're real and lovely. The police's means to them are much more cruel than when they robbed them. They didn't do so many bad things, but what they got was the ultimate punishment. What I remember most is the indifferent attitude of Bonnie's mother to Clyde, she told him to stay away from her daughter, because in the eyes of this old man, Clyde can only bring disaster to Bonnie. The old man is right and wrong. Right because she guessed the ending, wrong because she ignored what happened. But it is the process that often makes people feel enlightened. Before Bonnie fell in love with Clyde, she fell in love with this kind of life, the life she really wanted, Clyde didn't want her to leave, but she didn't want to leave, she had to resist, pursue, even Against the most powerful forces in society. She was running around on the Asura Road, and there was no way to go back, and more importantly, she had no plans to go back.
Bonnie and Clyde have some incomprehensible questions, which are different from the clear contradictions of Annie's robbery as a priest's daughter. These questions didn't exist at first, but as they were blocked many times, they began to Out of confusion, I began to think vaguely: Why is this road so difficult? What are we doing wrong? Apparently, death has taken away their right to think when they haven't figured out the answer. So they didn't understand until they died, no matter how good the reason, Shura is Shura after all, so murder and crime must be paid for with their lives, and more importantly, society cannot allow aliens to exist, even in a chaotic society.
Good story with a tragic ending. Bonnie and Clyde were shot to death by the indifference of the crowd, and the death was tragic, and the movie stopped here. At the end of the Asura Dao, the fragrance of roses remains. When it comes to their choices and encounters, there are infinite tragedies, so let's talk about love. The love on the Asura Road is so beautiful that it suffocates. I like it, how about you?
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