If this is just a funny film, it must not get such a high score. The critics are looking for the irony and criticism implicit in the film. In a small town, the rights are in the hands of the town committee. When problems occur, they do not want to solve them, but do everything possible to cover them up. They only claim that there is no problem to the outside world, but internally they use "thinking about the overall situation" to brainwash them. I don't know which country the director wants to use this small town as a metaphor, but from the perspective of the final E in the western film, it is obviously the United States that is the most suspicious. Maybe there is a little anti-war sentiment in the film? World Police? War in Iraq? Weapons of Mass Destruction? Only the director and screenwriter know this.
A good movie always brings a lot to mind. In fact, the satire of the film is very broad. Right around us, while promoting a "harmonious society", discordant things happen every day. Isn't this the object of satire in this film?
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