This is a tragedy depicting human nature

Hilda 2022-10-01 01:46:10

First of all, I do not agree with the "unfinished" statement! The essence of this film was in the last 20 minutes. After reading almost all the comments, I followed a certain "soybean oil" saying that "the last 20 minutes was the most exciting", so I jumped directly to the end of the film and watched backwards. I really understood the whole film. The essence of.
The two policemen pretended to be robbers and went to the black to eat the black. When they found the arms they had hidden, they began to disagree. Cage insisted on robbing, and Wood was afraid. When Cage pointed a gun at Wood’s head and asked him to open the vault , Wood's trust in Cage should have been completely gone. Wood was afraid of death, so he finally killed Cage and put it back in the jewelry weapon in hopes of perfection, but the underworld did not let him go...
What moved and regretted me the most was seeing Wood picking it up from him after killing Cage. Envelope, when I saw two air tickets/tickets, Cage had promised the air tickets/tickets to Wood (Cage loyally fulfilled his promise, but Wood killed his most loyal companion). By this moment, it should have been It was announced that Wood was also dead...a human tragedy, using negative examples to persuade people not to break the law, let alone lose their "loyalty."

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Extended Reading

The Trust quotes

  • Records Clerk: I'm going to call the sheriff.

    David Waters: I'll give you $100.

    Records Clerk: Okay.

    David Waters: [stunned silence] O-okay.

    [hands her wad of cash]

    David Waters: You know, you're lucky this investigation is so well funded.

    [Clerk looks unamused]

  • Jim Stone: [looks inside cylinder] This is full of cocaine.

    Mechanic: [laughs] Yeah, I know.

    Jim Stone: This needs to be submitted as evidence.

    Mechanic: [smile fades] Yes, right, absolutely, sorry.