These two films are about strong women who have a particularly "hard" personality and love to carry, but one is from the bottom of the society and was pitted because of being unkind. The gray hobby area of the class ended up with a lawsuit (there are different opinions on the facts, mainly based on film interpretation). But their common theme is that these two women have not given up to this day. In real life, Tonya Harding had a happy family after many years, had children, started a small business, and lived a stable life. And Molly Bloom, who wrote an autobiographical book that exposed several Hollywood stars (ex-Spider-Man Tobey Maguire was the prototype for Player X), decided to use her lessons to help more women start their own businesses.
There is Sorkin's machine-gun-like dialogue in the movie, and sometimes it does make people a little bit of a drama. After all, it's probably only Sorkin's own brain that talks like a gun. However, I have to say that the actress still managed the role very well, and let me see a lively and real woman. I hope she can nominate a golden man for this.
To be honest, I personally don't like the deliberate sale of feminism in modern movies, such as the previous bad movie
What impressed me most about this movie was the scene where Molly and her father were next to the ice rink at the end, which well explained her inner reason for being strong. In fact, many strong people, both male and female, have high expectations for them. parents, this is more pronounced in China. But this scene, in my opinion, weakened my father's expectations for her, and emphasized the real love of my parents under such expectations, which moved me.
As a gambling layman, I can almost say that I don't understand the poker scene in the film. . . However, Sorkin's cleverness is that he explained the basic ins and outs with character dialogue and some animation scenes more clearly, so it did not affect the viewing of the movie and the understanding of the relationship between the characters. I've read several reviews by professional poker fans who say his poker scenes are too childish. . . This is a matter of opinion and wisdom. Experts watch the doorway, and laymen watch the fun.
Finally, I want to say that I admire women like Molly and Tonya, their strength and fighting spirit are worth learning from all women. Wish there were more such real female portrayals in Hollywood.
View more about Molly's Game reviews