The charisma blooming from the confrontation between the principles of human behavior and the system above the self

Alyson 2022-04-21 09:01:48

I planned to watch this a few years ago, and I didn't finish watching this exciting film with a relaxed rhythm until today.
I have been thinking about a question, why the film is so charming and attractive, so many students and practitioners who study film-related majors are fascinated, and even rise to the height of a dream.
For many reasons,
cinema itself is called the seventh art, and a teacher at the university said that no art form is as all-encompassing as cinema.
Whenever a classic movie comes to mind, the emotion, excitement, joy, and sadness that it brought to us at that time flashed one by one. The movie brought us an outlet for emotional release, making us cry and make us laugh.
Movies are Vanity Fair, which can bring fame and fortune to filmmakers.
I remember that a writer said that writing novels is a very good way for a person to release their inner emotions. Similarly, when one’s own work brings laughter, emotion, etc. to others, oneself will also be psychologically satisfied. .
Standing at different angles, we will get different answers. As an audience, the movie opens a window for us. At least the movie I watched today opened a window for me to see things that I can’t see in daily life. Some things, inaccessible things, not even more inaudible things.
I was deeply attracted by the images of the two male protagonists created by the creators, and followed their stories step by step into the unimaginable plot.
Before writing the script of this film, I think the creator must have studied a lot of relevant materials and used the creative techniques of suspense genre films to tell us a good story.
When a person is not standing at a height, the limitations of vision can make us overlook something.
When a person has not experienced too many things and has gone through the vicissitudes of life, life can easily become dry and lack of emotion.
When a person does not understand his own life, and his own affairs are not well managed, how can he feel and create works that resonate with other people.
The play of this film is also worth learning,
At the beginning of the film, it is a case that looks like a kidnapping. The jeep is driving through the streets of a certain country. The rhythm of this scene is very good. In fact, this scene has nothing to do with the plot that will unfold later. To shape a reporter, a reporter who seeks the truth beyond me.
Immediately afterwards, another protagonist appeared. This scene is in contrast to the hustle and bustle just now. It also hides its own dramatic tension. Russell Crowe seems to have been abandoned and become an abandoned child, but he has a pair of eyes. It seems that he was already staring at him before he stepped out of the company building, which also paved the way for the subsequent plot.
Then the two clues developed in an orderly manner, until Al Pacino, a reporter, found Russell Crowe, and the collision between the two men began.

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Extended Reading
  • Ivory 2022-01-26 08:15:20

    Is it a newsman or a businessman? Is it a struggle or a compromise? Countless people stand up, countless people fall, the truth is always so cruel.

  • Wyatt 2022-04-24 07:01:05

    Americans probably don't know that China has a State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television, a CCTV, an official appraisal of push-ups, and an urban management system for detention and repatriation. An executive order is immediately harmonious, and there is no need for any laws, professional ethics, and freedom of the press to appear.

The Insider quotes

  • Jeffrey Wigand: I can't seem to find the criteria to decide. It's too big a decision to make without being resolved in my own mind.

    Lowell Bergman: Maybe things have changed.

    Jeffrey Wigand: What's changed?

    Lowell Bergman: You mean since this morning?

    Jeffrey Wigand: No, I mean since whenever.

  • Mike Wallace: Am I missing something?

    John Harris: What do you mean, Mike?

    Mike Wallace: I mean, he's got a corporate secrecy agreement - give me a break! I mean, this is a public health issue! Like an unsafe airframe on a passenger jet or some company dumping cyanide into the East River, issues like that! He can talk, we can air it! They've got no right to hide behind a "corporate agreement"! Pass the milk.