I don't always like slow-paced, long-winded movies, and Free Will is an exception. 163 minutes, diving and walking.
This is a film about desire and despair, and more importantly, his expression of desire and despair is almost perfect.
The story
begins with a rape, and the backlit shots are handled just right, not particularly violent, but quite brutal. The beginning is good, let people take a breath and hang their hearts.
What followed was a 9-year prison sentence, and the male lead who had his hair cut cleansed his body, got stronger, and everything was in order. His eyes also became a little quiet and a little depressing. However, there was something in his eyes that caught people's hearts, and the devil of desire seemed to be lurking there.
He tried to pursue a waitress, tried his best to fall in love, and restrained the urge to be violent after following the woman home... At this time, a good wish came into being: everything can be changed as the male protagonist hopes.
The change of things is often an inconspicuous little thing, and the situation collapses before it is too late to sigh, and it cannot be turned back. Yes, as the actor said, desire never left, always in his body. This discovery is fatal despair.
At the end of the film, on the dark seaside, the male protagonist cuts the arteries in his arms with a blade, and the woman howls in despair. The camera is zoomed out and the subtitles are raised, leaving the viewer with an uneasy mood, just like the sea shrouded in darkness.
The rhythm of the rhythm
film is well mastered, coherent and smooth, so much so that you realize after watching the film that it took you nearly 3 hours.
There are not too many lines, including music, plain camera records, pulling everything and telling you.
The most important thing is that the rhythm of the film creates a good atmosphere to let you in.
The concept of free will
free will comes from the Bible: So whatever you say or whatever you do, remember that you will be judged by the law that sets you free. Whether it is an explicit law or an implicit rule, everything is not free source.
People struggle, struggle, and compromise with free will every day. Every suicide is a solution to a problem. Death is the fate of the hero, and we may be able to survive in the compromised reality.
View more about Der freie Wille reviews