Just write a few sentences

Buster 2021-12-27 08:01:59

It’s been a long time since I wrote about the impressions, just write a few words

I saw someone saying that this film should be renamed White-eyed Wolf, but it doesn't have to be. The hero did kill his master, but his master didn't really treat him as a friend. Although the master is educated in the West and feels that people should be equal, the servant can directly call his name, and sometimes it is good to him. But when he united with his family and asked the male lead to sign that he was the perpetrator, and when he was dumped by his wife and overturned the food prepared by the male lead, it is estimated that he did not consider him a friend. I think he did a good job of the scene where the male protagonist signed and painted, and his eyes were real! In his bones, the male protagonist is still an Indian. Under the caste system, just like what I wrote in my thesis, he is in a mosaic stage. In ambivalence, there is no west but no east. He is definitely not as western as his wife. At least his wife is still Will encourage the male protagonist to study, although he will still scold him in front of outsiders, and he knows to tell him the truth.

Besides, when the male lead changed from the second driver to the first driver, he was bad when he drove away the Muslim driver who had been working for 20 years. I don't think that he is bad because he is poor, that's all, and the rich are also bad. However, after he became rich, he handled his subordinates well. At least it's not like some people, who have been oppressed before, but one day they made a fortune and desperately oppressed the weak. He repeated it several times, and finally decided to do it, and jumped out of the chicken coop with his nephew.

But it is true that most of the owner's family does not regard him as a human being. I mainly talked about caste, which is just class, but gender actually has it, and it is full of all kinds of derogation to the male host’s wife. Fortunately, she didn’t eat this set and ran away if she couldn’t bear it.

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Extended Reading
  • Erwin 2021-12-27 08:01:59

    The best-selling book adaptation is good, but I always feel that the film is a bit weird. The protagonist’s letter to the Chinese Premier is the first strange thing. What thoughts and social psychology would make the author imagine such a hypothesis? It may be the first time that a living contemporary Chinese leader has been "played" in a foreign film. The representative of the Indian socialist party who tried to vilify in the film is another strange thing. I know that the state of Klara in southern India is often successfully governed by the Communist Party of India, but I have never heard of corruption as in the film. The main line of the film is okay. Those who are interested can take a look. I heard that the original novel has also been translated and published.

  • Barton 2021-12-27 08:01:59

    Netflix’s adaptation has cut off many psychological descriptions of the protagonist, weakened his entanglement in breaking through the cage and the suppression of human nature by the Indian system. The lack of audiences’ understanding and comparison of his kind side almost made him a one-sided ambitious one. Conspirator. Although it is the original novel that I read after watching the trailer, there are still many metaphors and ironies about the social system of China and India in the novel, which are worthy of careful consideration.

The White Tiger quotes

  • Young Balram: Any poor boy in any forgotten village can grow up to become prime minister of India.

  • Young Kishan: [to young Balram] Now break every last one. You don't like it? Imagine it's my skull you're breaking.