Personally, I like this kind of film very much, with less language and more performance, it is easy for me to enter the plot. At first the protagonist expresses the reactions that we ordinary people have: pain, despair, anger. But the difference is that in the face of each choice, he will choose the positive side. Despite some tossing and finding that he was back at the starting point, he was still able to drag a broken leg up the moss-covered cliff.
Although he temporarily lost his memory due to a concussion, there are a few details that can show that he is not a villain at heart. First, when he first thought he was the robber, he showed that he might have killed the bank teller himself. Great guilt, followed by not feeling great excitement when he found out that he had a lot of dollars in the trunk, including burning money for warmth and not carrying a penny on him. Finally, there is the cute puppy, which is a manifestation of his childhood memories, and can give him motivation, direction, so that he can finally escape from the predicament.
PS: This movie can be used as a 90-minute acting teaching class.
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