There is no dialogue in the whole film. The protagonist has only two drivers, and the driver of the mysterious big truck who is chasing does not show his face from beginning to end, only the roar of the horrible motor, and finally I don’t know what caused this inexplicable chase. reason.
The scene when I walked out of the movie theater in a desperate and furious manner seemed to be right in front of my eyes. It is conceivable that such a "boring" movie can only bring a depressed and very frustrating freshness to a hot-blooded teenager.
Strangely, the impression of this movie has been with me for seventeen years. Whenever I chat with friends who love movies, I can't help mentioning it. In the film, the nervous and suspenseful atmosphere of the big truck chasing the car wildly increases with time. The frightened face of the chased person often crosses his mind. It's really weird.
Over time, I began to slowly taste the taste of this movie. The huge pressure on people in industrial society is always pervasive. The panic and anxiety (ANXIETY) keeps people out of breath. Although they try their best to resist, they can't get rid of them. What's more terrifying is that we can't tell where this lingering heart haze comes from. It seems to be Shu Ting's poem: We are trapped in this era, unable to resist and unable to struggle. That "horrified face" actually has its own shadow!
But the final ending of the whole film gives people hope, and the chaser is finally thrown into the abyss by the design of the chaser. Spielberg seems to be saying that the impermanence of fate and the resulting fear can be overcome, and that man's fate can ultimately be in his own hands, even if he cannot escape the next round of life and death.
Perhaps a high school teenager with relatively little information in the 1980s could hardly understand the soul of this movie. I didn't know that this was Spielberg's work until the year before last. The high-profile he played at the age of 23 made me, dull, figured out a general idea at the beginning of the 21st century. Ashamed.
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