While watching, my mind was conflicted. The god of the car jumped in the air, thanks to his circus family; the tacit cooperation to play with the police stemmed from the common goal of revenge. Aside from the vile nature of the robbery, we couldn't help being impressed by the tenacity of the brothers and the hard work they paid to inherit their family business. For the protagonist, the brothers who accompany the shadows (Sahir/Samar), it is difficult for us to judge their merits and demerits without moral reason; for the banker, nor for his ruthlessness in rejecting the brothers' fathers, we cannot justify sanctions. Although the car god and the police detective showed us their cool and gorgeous car skills and the roar of the roaring engine time and time again, their relative positions of the upper and lower winds were constantly rotating. I can't predict the ending of the movie, and I am more interested in the Indian Circus and the brothers. Both worry about the future. Although the brothers who committed heinous crimes cannot escape the law, I am really not reconciled that they will spend the rest of their lives in prison. But I didn't expect that the film would end in a "suicide" and "bankruptcy" - both ways.
"Some people commit crimes because they have been treated unfairly. Who knows right or wrong."
Obviously, this film does not allow us to judge who is right or wrong from a moral standpoint, but allows us to immerse ourselves in their world and experience Brotherhood. Young samar had held sahir's hand on the broken rope ladder. Dad said, "Don't let go, samar. Never let go of sahir's hand. Never, never leave him." A common goal that makes their friendship "hard as steel." When committing suicide by jumping off a cliff, the ending episode sings "This world is amazing, no regrets, no hatred". Therefore, the circus is not their ultimate goal. For revenge, everything can be paid, even on a rocky cliff.
The policeman in the film once pleaded: "Forgiveness is more valuable than punishment. Punishment is enough." This kind of punishment may be the banker's refusal, the loss suffered by the bank, or the brothers' entanglement about the body, the lover It may also be the last difficult choice between reaching out and letting go at the doomed moment. The so-called "punishment" deepens the tragic image of the main character.
The police officer said at the end: "Victory is yours, sahir samar."
Legendary circus, this dream will continue...
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