When Bonnie and Clay hit it off and hit the ground running, they just want to loot some money from grocery stores and gas stations. They meet the owner farmer in an empty house; as Steinbeck describes in "The Grapes of Wrath", the farmer had to flee as a result of the Great Depression because the land and house were taken away by the bank Go to California to make a living. Clay was very sympathetic to the farmer, and together with the farmer, he fired several shots at the house and the bank closing sign, venting his anger towards the bank, and since then he has specialized in robbing the bank. These plots are probably all fictionalized by the film, which is intended to illustrate; Bonnie and Clay finally become robbers and murderers, and there are social reasons. Bonnie and Clay initially rob a grocery store, and Clay, who was nearly hacked to death by the shopkeeper, escapes with the shopkeeper without firing a shot; during the first bank robbery, Clay shoots and jumps into the car After Pedal wanted to intercept the bank clerk, he was furious at the short man who had just joined the gang because it was the first time he had killed someone. Clay and his brother were so happy when they were reunited. They asked about his mother and went to Missouri to rent an empty house together. After a few days of ordinary people's lives, these all show that in their hearts, the spark of goodness of human nature has not been extinguished. When Bonnie and the others saw their mother, Bonnie took off the necklace on his neck and put it on his mother, and Clay told her that they would stop when the limelight passed and live closer to their mother as Bonnie said. ; These words are not perfunctory, but their heartfelt words and their inner yearning. The first time Clay and Bonnie robbed a bank, they didn't take a farmer's money; the farmer later told the police that they did nothing wrong and that he would go to their graves to put flowers when they died. Clay, Bonnie and the little one run for their lives when they meet a group of peasants fleeing west, who give them water and a piece of clothing. The short father said to Clay and Bonnie that they could "take this place as their own home and live as long as they wanted." All this shows that the poor people at the bottom have different views on Bonnie and Clay than the police, and think they have Sympathy; some of the children of the refugee peasants even saw them as heroes. Bonnie and Clay finally wanted to "move to another state", "no criminal record, no pursuit", the good-looking little porcelain man that Bonnie finally bought condensed all her hopes, but all of these are like taking a piece of paper. Like the newspaper of a poem written by Bonnie, it was blown away by the wind. In the end, the film truthfully expresses the countless shots that Bonnie and Clay have shot by the police, and also expresses their dissatisfaction with the police venting their personal hatred.
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