I too Like him, he was crazy with depression.
Sean Penn, then you are cruel!
Actually, even if it wasn't for that special ending, I would still like this movie. Because in the first half, it is such a pure film, purely telling a story, purely telling people and people... the purity of the early days of modernism, which has been left for a long time.
Unlike the current movies, what has not had time to be established, doubt has come first; what has not been created yet, and the subversion has begun-in this respect, I hate postmodernism. If the God of Genesis was so suspicious of such a deconstructive spirit, then this world would have been leveled before it was founded...it would be an easy task.
It’s a pity (or gratifying) that the film has reached the second half and finally transitioned from the early stage of modernism to the late stage of modernism. Of course, this can make the audience admire the director’s profoundness. I am not exceptional because this ending is so happy for the director. hatred. But having said that, what is so bad about a happy reunion? If this kind of thing happens in real life, the happy ending must be what people want, but if it is in the movie, it must be broken without enlightenment... I hope I can't get it?
Alas, a dilemma.
Movies are really not a pure pleasure.
Scourge-God himself came forward to punish his rebellious son... God belongs to God, Caesar belongs to Caesar... It is still not enough to judge good and evil. Yu Saizhisi, who can say this?
I remembered an unknown movie I had seen before, one of the fragments-a six or seven-year-old boy asked his brother and friends to tie him to a tree and pose as a crucifixion... Look up to the sky and mute: Dad, I am here...
I thought he wanted to be Jesus... Boys have some unrealistic ambitions to save all mankind... I take it for granted... but not.
His father was killed. He just wanted him to come back. He thought that if any child was tied to a cross and crucified for three days, his father would come back from the sky to save him...
...It's sunset, and his brother unhooked him from the tree. He cried and blamed his brother: Why did you let me down? Now Dad will never come back...you killed him! You killed Dad!
The story of God has always been more touching than the story of God himself.
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