When I saw a butterfly (or a moth), I suddenly felt that there was a metaphor that he was sublimated at that moment. Raymond is dead, he is the protagonist's patient? friend? Partner? It was a complicated friendship, so Raymond's departure transformed him. He began to focus more on saving lives, selling cars, helping patients who could not afford the membership fee using AZT, and bravely litigating with the Food and Drug Administration to allow those AIDS patients to obtain medicines and avoid AZT poisoning.
From confirming AIDS to finally blooming like a redemption, from questioning to strong self-rescue to gaining friendship and taking the initiative to help. If he was a bastard before he got sick, he was fully blooming 7 years after he got sick. A process of self-rescue and saving him is touching. I have to say this bastard is a good guy.
Regarding Raymond, I have to say that he is the most distressed. He is rejected by his father and has no friends (the only friend is Jennifer Garner). He gave up on himself and hated himself. Until I met Waldorf, from the beginning of the two-phase hatred to the last super friendship, it made people think what a lovely person he was. Waldorf gave his friend the warmth, trust and respect, and he sold it for this close friend before leaving. I took out life insurance and changed back to men's clothes to find my father. There were only a few seconds of his passing in the show, but I cried and was sad. Fangfo still remembers the warm eyes when he forced his friends to shake hands with him in the supermarket, the childlike eyes of a girl when he painted blueberry color paint when he wanted to create a festive atmosphere, and the firmness that encouraged himself to change into men's clothes when he took drugs when he wanted to meet his father. Eyes, facing his father hope to get warm hurt eyes. He is not a girl, but he has his own sensitivity and vulnerability. I feel bad for him, like a child.
Regarding this drama, I can only say that I cannot comment on the attitude of the Food and Drug Administration towards AZT and other drugs, and whether the drugs obtained by the male protagonist are really so effective and harmless. Maybe it's a plot need, maybe it's a movie effect. Maybe the FDA didn't just ban the drug because of the pharmacist. But Jennifer Garner's play wasn't great. And Matthew McConaughey is really good, sorry I only knew him and Kate Hudson and a series of romantic comedies before this drama. This time it really bloomed.
Everyone was angry with "The Wolf of Wall Street" and Leonardo before, but after watching this, I will vote for Matthew. Wall Street is too exaggerated. There are some precipitation and warm things in this drama that are slowly melting you. Will be a little more down to earth.
View more about Dallas Buyers Club reviews