What would a poet-killer who has forgotten his soul (possibly from a previous life or even many lives ago) look like in a movie that is as mysterious as a hallucinogen?
Jarmusch's "Dead Man" told us. He must be unlucky and weak, but at the same time, he must be swift and fierce. Depp's portrayal of such a role couldn't be more appropriate. That pale and melancholy face seemed to be custom-made for such a strange poet, and with that stern action, every time a shot was fired, death would come.
The plot of the movie starts out fairly normal, but it quickly becomes supernatural. The cute Indian fat man carries all the key points of the film's unusual development. The initial node is actually a bit absurd, although, this is in line with Jarmusch's consistent style.
When he knew that the stupid white who was shot in the chest was William Blake, the cute Indian fat man said something that made me laugh, "Then you are not only a poet and painter, you are also a killer white. killer". Haha, who said it wasn't?
From this moment on, the movie is officially runaway from a small accountant who came to a strange city to work and was rejected by a new girl who was killed by her ex-boyfriend. Turn the story into a psychedelic journey of a poet-killer looking for his soul's destination.
Just because of the same name. Yes, just because of the duplicate name. Please do not take the name of a poet lightly.
Haha so cool. So interesting.
Haha, reading more poems can save your life.
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