There are nine chapters, and I always feel that there is no need to divide them deliberately. For the meaning of the chapters, you can refer to Dog Town.
The movie is very long and the pace is slow, of course, this is in line with the background of the times hundreds of years ago. Wyoming is the least populous state in the country in the northwest, with a population of only a few hundred thousand, not as many as Hong Kong Island. Surviving in the snow is difficult, but bounty hunters have to catch them alive. Encountered with four accomplices who sacrificed their lives to rescue, it was a major event. The character creation is relatively successful, and it also makes people feel how courageous it was to think of being ahead under the conditions of the year.
The most exciting, lies in a few unexpected turns. One is that the black man was blasted, it really hurts! The second is that Lincoln's letter is false. His significance to black people is to disarm white people's psychological weapons.
"Blacks are only safe when whites are unarmed." That quote is too classic.
The third is the subtle change of the new sheriff. His final attitude once made people think that he would kill the black man who had no bullets and could not move, but in the end he spoke his reasoning and hanged the shameless wicked woman.
It's pretty bloody, and a little gross, but it's real.
View more about The Hateful Eight reviews