"Clues" is a very interesting movie.
The film was very patient. From a crime, Dick came to the Los Angeles Police Department to take the evidence. It happened that Jim was investigating a serial homicide, and the two people joined forces to trace the murderer, leading to a five-year story. The previous case, and the lives of three people. Looking at the love and hatred of a former colleague for Dick, you will want to know his previous experience. Under his expression of winning everything, he must be hiding something. These experiences were exposed little by little as the case progressed. The life of Jim, another police officer, is intertwined. Both people have a feeling of deja vu.
Dick and Jim are both very obsessive people. They can't let go of the idea of catching criminals, but when they focus on small things, they lose their way. When the two people met, they might feel familiar, because they saw their own shadow in each other's body. This seems to be more obvious in Dick's place, because he is older and more experienced, and he has walked past Jim. He was on the way, so he asked for leave and chose to stay in this city. He wanted to use this case to make up for the mistakes he had made before, and also wanted to use his experience to help Jim.
The story and shooting methods of the film are not new, and they are quite satisfactory. The director laid out the layout patiently. The lines of the film are wonderful, and the shots and scheduling are impressive. When two police officers confronted their suspect Albert At the time, the positions of several actors are full of meaning and tension, and Dick hidden behind the glass reflects himself in the mirror, which is a true reflection-the most difficult thing for us to face is also the most. What you should face is your true self.
The shortcoming of the film lies in the characterization, there is not too much to explain Albert's life, and the two detectives also have a rough side, but Denzel Washington made up for this shortcoming with his acting skills. People can't help but sigh, ginger is still old and spicy.
What touched me the most was the title of the film, The Little Things, which translated into clues, very suitable for the crime thriller type of the film. I would rather translate the name literally-little things, little things.
In life, there are too many small things. Or it can be said that in the current era, there are no major events in an individual's life at all, they are all trivial matters. For example, the little thing of talking, the little thing of eating, the little thing of sleeping, the little thing of watching movies, the little thing of work. For example, my official account is called reading this little thing o(∩_∩)o
But little things are not always little things. Everyone’s life is filled with little things, but these little things pile up one by one into our meal, one day, one month, one year, or even a lifetime. We should not take any small matter lightly, otherwise it may affect the direction of life.
Every word you receive leaves an imperceptible mark in your thinking. Every meal shapes your health and figure. Sleeping every night determines your mental state and long-term health. Everything at work. The choice determines the direction of your future career. Every small idea you assume becomes the ladder of the next idea. Life is like countless forks in the road. Every path may be a small choice, in a few cases. , Our minds will be fooled and make a little inertial decision, but in general, all the small things are the result of our own choices and reflect our outlook on life and values. What we are like What kind of life will you get.
But many times we don’t know where these little things will take us, we can’t see our lives clearly, and we don’t have time to care where the little things now take us, so we can only rush on the road. Wrong, we thought we did the right thing, but we didn’t know that it was wrong, and we attribute everything to fate.
But there will always be the next little thing. Isn't it?
Welcome to follow my personal public account:
View more about The Little Things reviews