Afterthought

Cleta 2022-04-27 06:01:01

I don’t even get a good laugh at the jokes Domat said in the club. It may take a native English or familiar with English to understand, combining the original rhythm, or black culture to understand. Some jokes are very sad to think about carefully. In the middle of the night, father was drunk and mother was crying, telling a joke.

Dormet learned to tell jokes from homeless people and collected funny material. I thought there would be some twists and turns. The homeless guy who stolen the story material by Dormet came to ask Domet for trouble. It turned out that I was worrying too much. Maybe Domat has processed and adapted it by himself, maybe the tramp can't hear the album he released, or maybe the tramp can't help it even if it wants to find it. It's just that the story is taken to be recreated, and those who live on the upper level are more or less exploiting the next level.

During the filming process, I watched with trepidation, fearing that Domet would fail in debt, and didn't want to watch the end of the tragedy. After all, a group of newcomers who have never made a movie, the director is just a small supporting role, and the director of photography is a group of (vulnerable) students who have not all grown up, and their wages are in arrears, and the more they are unable to come out in the later stages.

After working, I always care about the sacrifices made by such ordinary people for the protagonist’s career. In fact, the movie is just a small detail that is irrelevant to the protagonist's difficult situation. I am always distracted to think that the crew cannot get the full salary, which is to find the trouble of B in the movie about A, and I am not happy. I believe that after the big sales of Domet's movies, all the outstanding salaries should be made up, and I hope they will be made up.

The scene that moved me the most was when he raised his face in the dark theater and fixedly stared at the beam of light projected on the screen. After all the twists and turns, he finally entered the beam of light.

And Caitou commented that this movie is very consistent with the temperament of Netflix. When I watched it, I was always looking for a place to match. Now, if I think about it, Netflix is ​​also challenging the old theaters. The movie theaters dominate the channels. Netflix has opened up the online. Platform, not picking up rice from other people's bowls.

In the era when Dommett lived, the movie theaters showed films that white people loved to watch. The overly civilized and subtle humorous expressions made black people confused and just felt bored.

Dormet couldn't find anyone to make a movie for him, so he could do nothing but do it himself. No one goes to make movies that black people love to watch. They are submerged voices and are regarded as a small crowd. Those low-level funny, it is difficult to enter the big and beautiful movie theaters, and they have a long name in the history of filming. I'm very happy that Dormet did it and paid the price he could pay. Fortunately he won, so today I can see another movie about him making a movie.

I should have known for a long time that there is no need to worry about the ending. Simple reasoning. If he didn’t win, if he was just a sad loser, devoted to everything but got nothing, then there won’t be this movie at all today, no People will remember him. If he had not proven himself many years ago, whether it was box office success or something else, it would prove that he has the value to be remembered.

A person who has been alive can still be reproduced and photographed his life after many years. This person must have his uniqueness and must live a stranger than most of us. To have such a life that can be told as a story to others is like living out of thin air.

View more about Dolemite Is My Name reviews

Extended Reading

Dolemite Is My Name quotes

  • Walter Crane: I don't know how much longer we can do these pictures, Rudy. You see, that's why we changing our approach. We got a new one coming. I bet you gonna like this. You really gonna dig this one. Check this out. It's called Cornbread, Earl and Me. It's about a kid from the ghetto that's the first from the neighborhood to get out and make it to college. Now, don't that make you feel good on the inside, Rudy?

    Rudy Ray Moore: Brother, don't nobody wanna see no shit like that.

  • Rudy Ray Moore: I ain't lying, man, people love me. Hey, if you play this song, I guarantee motherfuckers'll start hopping and squirming. When I used to play this record live, motherfuckers would actually faint. They would faint on the floor.