-Millions of galaxies of hundreds of millions of stars and a speck on one in a blink. That's us. Lost in space. The cop,you,me,who notices?
-A guy gets on the MTA here in LA and dies. Think anybody will notice?
The two passages that moved me the most were from the "Silver Wolf" killer Vincent (personally, I think the villain played by Tom is very handsome like a wolf in the snow) I swear! This is the coolest, most ruthless and most stealthy villain! !
The story begins on a night just like before.
I do this for a living.
Killing Machine says it's just a job, no feeling, no reason.
You and I are just a tiny star in the vast universe.
Even though Vincent was a habitual murderer who used taxi drivers as scapegoats, no one noticed what was wrong with the "driver's serial murder and suicide" case.
Finally, ironically and bleakly, what kind of experience does Vincent die on the train without anyone noticing?
Perhaps we are too indifferent to the world, to strangers, or even to death. And Max happens to be a completely different character, discerning right from wrong, and sympathetic.
However, Max's view of survival is also a common problem of modern people. With dreams, he has been mediocre for decades under the pretext of saving money to live. In the end, I dreamed that the dream was not fulfilled and I grew old, and I was content with the status quo and was paralyzed by TV or the Internet.
Two characters, two outlooks on existence, mock each other, but they are two diseases. We have to be healed.
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