Three views are not correct

Brice 2022-04-20 09:01:16

First of all, this is another zzzq movie, with a black protagonist, a white hippie crazy old man, jazz, and No. 22 is also a marginal setting. It's not that black people are bad, it's just that this setting is not normal. I don't know how to make a movie without making a black America.

There are a lot of details that I don't like. The black man accepted the mission of 22 because he wanted to grab a new life's post on Earth. He began to think about returning to Earth and tried directly holding another new life, but it didn't work. His thoughts were so selfish and not at all. Consider another new life. In the end, 22 gave him the earth sticker and directly became a lost soul. If the protagonist didn't go to 22, he would become a lost soul forever. This is all the harm of the protagonist.

At first, the protagonist walked by himself without looking at the road, but he refused to accept his fate and forced his way out of the elevator to heaven, causing the accountant to look through the database. Isn't this a big picture of the new crown patients in the United States?

The girl who studied trumpet came to find the teacher, but the protagonist just wanted to perform his own performance, and directly refused to go out. Fortunately, 22 enlightened the girl to help her find the meaning of learning. The protagonist is really irresponsible.

The accountant is actually an image of a diligent and conscientious civil servant, who is supposed to be the representative of the middle class in society, as a result of being marginalized and ridiculed. It's so uncomfortable to watch hard-working people are a joke in their eyes

Add a little more to let everyone live in the moment without planning and dreaming. It's a movie that comforts the poor.

I really can't think of such a selfish and irresponsible value film scoring 9.2

That's what I mean by limited writing.

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Extended Reading

Soul quotes

  • Joe: You ready?

    22: Huh?

    Joe: To come live.

    22: ...I'm scared, Joe. I'm not good enough. And anyway, I... I never got my spark.

    Joe: Yes, you did. Your spark isn't your purpose. That last box fills in when you're ready to come live. And the thing is, you're pretty great at jazzing.

  • 22: [in Joe's body] Like my mentor George Orwell used to say, State sponsored education is like the rattling of a stick inside a swill bucket.