Resources have been stored on the network for a long time, and it has been a long time to hear the name. The gloomy shots always remind people of violence and fear, so they turn on play, pause, and turn off. After a few continuous cycles, I really accepted the movie with a calm mind.
Gluttony, greed, laziness, lust, pride, jealousy, rage.
An old police detective who is about to retire, in his career of more than 30 years, he has cultivated enough patience and peace of mind. And in order to seek a bigger breakthrough, or more appropriate to use an adventurous young boy, he moved to New York with his beloved wife and lived in a humble apartment where the subway every five minutes was like an earthquake. They had no children, and his wife lost her job for following him, and she was unhappy all day.
David's series of performances from the on-site investigation of the gluttony case gave people a bad impression of being naive, arrogant, open-mouthed and unprofessional. When it comes to the greed case, David took off his clothes first when he arrived at the crime scene, and then lapped comfortably on the office chair, telling the staff to have a cup of coffee, etc., which once again confirmed his lack of occupation. Attitude to speak of, and reveal the satisfaction of their own status quo. After the two cases occurred, William first pointed out the relevance of the cases, and the truth surfaced. And so the unsuspenseful laziness, lust and arrogance follow. The murderer surfaced, and the director began to use a large space to describe David's violent character. But the ending is a bit far-fetched, and the location of the murderer's jealousy can't make me accept it very convincingly. I think the murderer is a serial killer plotted out of anger over his seven deadly sins and driven by redemption. It boils down to jealousy being too far-fetched. If he was really jealous of the world, how could he be so calm and die?
Several conversations between William and David in the play are also impressive. David arrogantly expounds his omnipotence, and William never tries to uncover the truth. This is the upbringing of an old detective. He knows how not to make someone angry, and he knows how to express his dissatisfaction.
Gluttony, laziness, lust, pride. For ordinary people, we can't do the best. But anger and jealousy can. The director talks about anger in a large space, and uses anger and jealousy as the finale, which is enough to see his intentions.
From the 28-year-old's point of view, the director positioned himself as William, and reminded young people with the peaceful attitude of a past person to be vigilant against the seven deadly sins, and to control the burning anger and untimely desire in his heart to do his best as soon as possible. Be an ordinary person.
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