This article was first published on the public account [Beyond Monologue], welcome to pay attention.
At the beginning of the movie, Li Yifeng turned into a clown and said, "I have already fought the battle that should be fought, the road that should be run has come to an end, and the way I should guard is guarded by me."
I think it's especially secondary.
When he arrived on the ship and decided his fate with a game of rock-paper-scissors, he was deceived by the Chinese, time and time again, and betrayed by Fa Xiao, again and again.
He always adhered to his own way, and used his life to defend that illusory thing.
He was ridiculed, despised, and taught.
In this law of the jungle, he is an outlier. Those who follow the rules bully him in every possible way. On the surface, they dislike him, but they are actually afraid and guilty. Because he did what cowards couldn't. How could he be different? How could he escape?
Really funny.
Once the rules are set, people are led by the nose like a marionette. No matter how brutal or vile this rule is, no one has ever questioned the maker of the rule, or the rule itself, but they will only kill each other, obliterate themselves, and make themselves unrecognizable.
When Li Yifeng said viciously, "Lao Tzu's rules are set by me," he almost burst into tears, and he said it again: "I have already fought the battle that should be fought, the road that should be run has come to an end, and the way that should be followed is the end. The old man is guarding himself."
It doesn't feel like a middle school at all.
Also, I really like the image of the clown. The Joker has given me a pathetic feeling since Batman: The Dark Knight. The more he grinned, the more my heart ached for them.
So when I saw the clowns cut through thorns and kill those colorful monsters in the two-dimensional world, I felt a lot of joy in my heart. And this imagination is too reasonable, those greedy, irritable people, who can say that they are not monsters.
The last sentence of the movie: "There is no wave against the wind, and no cowardice against the wind. I would like to dedicate this film to you, who silently guards yourself whether it is good or bad."
I know that I have to pay a price for this, which may be too heavy for me to bear.
This article was first published on the public account [Beyond Monologue], welcome to pay attention.
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