American movies are best at describing the state of Breaking Bad (walking between good and evil), and there is a certain form of original sin in the movie.
For example, the male protagonist is a stray person, while the male supporting role is a cross-dresser. They take drugs and promiscuously do everything, including when they sell drugs, they refuse to provide them to those who
can't afford membership fees. But their pureness is the flash point throughout the movie, such as the male protagonist's no sex after he has AIDS,
the friendship between the male protagonist and the male supporting cast, and their insistence on suing the FDA. Even so, it is difficult to attribute them to good people in the traditional sense. They
are very similar to the deviant spirit of cowboys. The logic of what they do is only the most primitive survival instinct of human beings, even if they are declared to have only 30 days of life. Do not surrender to fate,
bribe, smuggle, and sell drugs in the form of selling memberships, and their purpose is not as noble as saving the world, but simply wanting to live. The purity of the lotus
may only be contrasted with the filth of the silt, and their persistence and survival instincts also shine against the background of their original sin. Perhaps the film is simply telling a
truth, in the face of death, there is no distinction between noble and inferior, and the pursuit of life is also the same.
View more about Dallas Buyers Club reviews