Fortunately, I didn’t read the introduction and comments before watching the movie. If I didn’t feel so depressed, this is another movie that would be very boring if I knew the ending of the plot in advance.
From beginning to end, it is not so much a role model as a life partner, at least for Rooster. He was harassed by a pedophile priest as a child and was single. Later, he took Turk as a spiritual sustenance and took pleasure in imitating him, playing baseball with him, and fighting with him. However, Turk's act of planting criminals made him a brilliant image in Rooster's heart. It collapsed instantly; Rooster began to learn to kill unconvicted suspects and gradually went to extremes, and when the matter was about to be exposed, he raped Turk's lover without covering his face so that the case surfaced. This is a common sense. It's hard to understand, Rooster is jealous? envy? Or revenge? Or both. Before he died, he gently said to Turk: Tom, take care. I believe the gun he pointed at Tom at the end would not pull the trigger.
By the way, you can watch the endings of "Justified Killing" and "Stealing the Line of Fire" over and over again. One you die, the other I die, it's worth thinking about...
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