Harry Brown and Leonard Attwell both exude a rock 'n' roll flavor that's been a staple of British cinema, from Trainspotting and Two Smoking Guns to This Is England. Two elderly people approaching 80 regain their trampled dignity from a group of crazy young people. Leonard Attwell had already delivered the message of death when he first took out the knife in the pub's toilet. For the lonely old people, the only thing left is the dignity of life, and life is enough for them. Harry Brown's expression was calm and repressed when he heard the policewoman say that the murderer may have turned from murder to manslaughter, and the soul of the Marine was awakened. The killing begins, but it is the beginning of the killing.
Every time Harry Brown shoots in the film like an elegy for death, there is no God in this chaotic city.
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