Political Correctness in Westerns

Derrick 2022-12-12 11:47:30

That's right, even the most traditional Western films have now been swept by the wave of political correctness. White mothers and Indian sons, little white detectives and black girls fall in love, unfettered lesbians in small towns, female artists riding naked in broad daylight, in short, this West is no different from today's American society. "Nothing is more dangerous than a person with a gun, and nothing is more helpless than a person without a gun." Griffin's words made it clear that they satirized the situation of the proliferation of guns in the United States, and in the end, even the army did not want to run wild. The daring bandit being beaten to death by a group of women also symbolizes the rise of feminism in today's society. The most interesting role is undoubtedly the villain Griffin. This villain boss looks like a priest all day long. What he likes most is adopting messy people into his big family and adopting children to brainwash them. Can you see it? Isn't this just ridiculing the church naked? The men in the small town died in the mine disaster. The surviving widows are looking forward to a priest day and night to give them a psychological sustenance. It turned out to be looking forward to, and looking forward to Griffin, which is really a great irony. The protagonist fled the Griffin gang and joined the hostess’s family, which also symbolized that the American people had broken away from the male-dominated mainstream society that originally believed in Catholicism and entered a pluralistic era of the rise of feminism. Of course, in the end, the real pastor came, and Balabala said, in short, love is the most important thing, and everything else doesn’t matter.

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