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Isaiah 2022-03-21 09:02:38
Indians Extinct American Creatures
The evolution of ecosystems and the development of human society are always accompanied by local or global conflicts.
Different living habits and survival concepts of human beings, such as cowboy grazing and farmers' reclamation, will inevitably conflict in local areas. The cow ate the crops, and... -
August 2022-01-09 08:01:07
I think it's good
After watching it, I felt that Eastwood’s "Pale Knight" was a copy of this film, especially the scene where the hero left in the echo of the shout. It was completely copied. After checking on the Internet, it was found that the two films were based on the same A story, whether it is plagiarism or...

Brandon De Wilde
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Jettie 2022-03-16 09:01:05
Works between traditional westerns and modified anti-westerns ("Noon" in 1952 opened the trend of the latter). The film has eye-catching scenery photography (actual shooting on location) and a beautiful theme soundtrack, but the rhythm is slow. There are three main differences in the play from the previous classic westerns: 1. The tradition of extrajudicial heroes that "come from the wilderness and return to the wilderness" and to save others and self-exile as their mission is opened (after the "Searcher", Lionel & Eastwood Westerns, and a series of superhero movies). 2. Begin to reflect on the distorted and uglier Westerns of the Indians (Joe Starrett refutes Ryker's lines). 3. Set up the image of the little boy Joey as a bystander from beginning to end, and use this structure to structure the viewer's point of view, Joey and the audience's expectations for Western films are unified. The rest of the film is no different from traditional westerns. Whether it is civilized/barbaric, farming/grazing, family (woman)/alone (man), or the provocation and duel in the bar, it can satisfy classic westerns. The taste of movie fans. (8.0/10)
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Summer 2022-04-24 07:01:17
The ending is moving, with Shane on horseback drifting away amid the boy's cries. His departure was almost doomed from the start, there was no place for him in this wilderness and civilization. Alan Ladd is great, but the boy...I think it's bad anyway, I get irritated when I see him...I don't like staring at the hero through the eyes of a child this time
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[after the meal that the Starretts share with Shane]
Shane: That was an elegant dinner, Mrs. Starrett.
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Shane: So you're Jack Wilson.
Jack Wilson: What's that mean to you, Shane?
Shane: I've heard about you.
Jack Wilson: What have you heard, Shane?
Shane: I've heard that you're a low-down Yankee liar.
Jack Wilson: Prove it.