Some parts actually overlapped mysteriously with the stories I wrote back then. He didn't care, but when he stretched out his hand, she pulled up and walked forward. Just follow him. Aimlessly. There will also be dissatisfaction and tantrums, complaining in a rude manner, but the next second, crying and saying that he didn't mean to say that, turning around and hugging him and begging him for forgiveness. There will also be times when they can't stand it, and suddenly leave and run away, leaving without saying goodbye, and running forward desperately. The difference is that Clyde chased after him like crazy, hugging the blonde beauty, crying and begging her "Please honey, do never leave me without saying nothing.
" That sentence started waiting for me. I'm glad I didn't see this movie at the time. At that time, I was still young, ignorant and ignorant of love, and took hurt as a proof of love. Childish, stubborn and unwilling to change. I was 17 when I wrote that story, and I just thought this kind of love was cool. And now, I think I understand the story better, and the tale of Bonnie and Clyde.
I love this blond girl, wearing a beret crooked, holding a gun and cigar for the camera, one foot on the side of the car, and her eyes are arrogant and cold. And when she pulls a pistol out of her handbag, or says "We rob the bank." in the car, seemingly nonchalantly.
And this brown-haired gentleman. Because he didn't want to do labor, he chopped off his two toes with an axe. I don't know whether to say he doesn't have the kind of escapism, or he's too kind to cut off his own toes. He rushed into the bank to grab the money, and was told that the bank was bankrupt. He grabbed a clerk and ordered him, "Tell my girlfriend what you said to me just now!" Bonnie couldn't help but listen. Laughed all the time. Clyde glanced at her from time to time while driving, and saw her laughing inexplicably and jokingly, we grabbed 1 yuan, 9 cents, 8, and you laughed like this.
He fawned over Bonnie like a kid, he liked Bonnie so much. So does Bonnie.
My favorite, unsurprisingly, is the smile at each other in the sun.
Police ambush. The bushes swayed slightly. A flock of white doves suddenly flew up. Bonnie looked up with interest, then to Clyde. He was also looking towards him. The sun was shining, and they smiled at each other. Then it was shot into a sieve.
All voices gradually subsided. Everyone gathered around.
This is the story of Bonnie and Clyde.
This story lingers in my mind, only the smile in the sunlight.
So meaningful, as if thousands of words, thousands of times, all flowed in the past in this eye.
Sometimes an instant is as long as an eternity.
They don't think they're too smart or desperate,
They know that the law always wins;
They've been shot at before,
But they do not ignore
That death is the wages of sin.
Some day they'll go down together;
They'll bury them side by side;
To few it'll be grief--
To the law a relief--
But it's death for Bonnie and Clyde.
-Bonnie Parker
have a history. The full poem is here: http://www.censusdiggins.com/bonnie_and_clyde.html
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