War in marriage

Santos 2022-03-20 09:01:05

Thought I was going to talk about marriage? No, just talk about "Smiths". It starts from marriage counseling to the end of marriage counseling, from dissatisfaction with marriage to a happy marriage, as if we should treat it as a marriage discussion film, and treat those wonderful fights as marriage. The metaphor of the relationship can be explained in this way.

Does anyone have a different opinion? I think this is obviously a gunfight movie. Looking at those professional equipment, professional gunfights, and professional fighting actions, no, no, no, I firmly cannot agree with this opinion. Gunfight? Then the two of them—Smiths—must have rivals. Who are their rivals in this film? At first it was a task assigned to them by the superior, and the target was unknown. Then it was themselves to themselves, and then their superiors. In view of the fact that the Smiths later reconciled together, their opponents seem to be their superiors. So who is this "superior" who has never appeared directly before?

We assume that it is a country, and the country has always represented justice, which makes sense. The two husbands and wives represent different factions in the country, receive tasks, and then execute them. What happened later? Different factions in this country sent people to kill them. It was their colleagues who fought with them. Numerous colleagues who represented justice were killed by them? ——No, no, this doesn't work, it's unreasonable, and it will be scolded.

Then we assume that this superior is just a certain group, representing the unjust party. Imagine that the couple are killers hired by two large monopoly groups. Then they kill each other and kill many heroes in their group. Ah, this can always make sense, they both serve injustice at first, and then wake up, wake up? No mention in the video! At the end, it just said that their marriage problems were solved and their marriage became happy.

Therefore, this can only be a marriage discussion film, which aims to illustrate the strangeness between husband and wife in marriage. Whether you have been married for one year or ten years, there will always be something in your spouse that you don’t For the things we know, for the sake of stimulus, we disguised him as a killer, which is more intuitive, so that the audience is satisfied. Ah, the line of screenwriting is getting harder and harder now. I understand it very well. A simple marriage problem requires metaphors, guns, high-tech explanations, and... the most important thing is the box office. As long as there is a box office, that beautiful wife has to be a sharpshooter and fight her husband who is also a sharpshooter. Check it out, the "superior" also knows that it is not good for husband and wife to be killers at the same time, and wanting them to kill each other is the most superfluous thing.

The war in marriage is the process of battling wits and courage with the audience. The results of it? Don't mention the box office, the box office does not explain the problem, because there are too many people with spare money nowadays. When screenwriters don't care about the box office, maybe our movies will become more artistic then, at least, it will seem like that. In addition, some of the so-called "artists" who seem to be very artistic now and don't care about the box office, please wear thicker clothes and don't reveal the bottom of the inside.

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Extended Reading
  • Jewell 2021-10-20 19:00:07

    Although these two people were extremely controversial back then, but after watching this movie I have to say that they are a perfect match! Julie is too sexy for women to resist, let alone men. ps. The last shootout and soundtrack praise cry! !

  • Javon 2021-10-20 18:59:54

    Julie's sexy is unmatched

Mr. & Mrs. Smith quotes

  • Jane Smith: I told you to wait for my signal, you didn't wait for my signal.

    John Smith: Well, I improvised.

    Jane Smith: You deviated from the plan.

    John Smith: The plan was flawed.

    Jane Smith: The plan was not flawed.

    John Smith: Anal.

    Jane Smith: *Organized.*

    John Smith: Jane, 90% of this job is instinct.

    Jane Smith: Well, your instinct set off *every* alarm in the building!

    John Smith: My instinct got the job done. It may not have been the Jane show...

    Jane Smith: No, it was the John show: it was half-assed. Like Christmas, like our anniversary, like the time you forgot to bring my mother's birthday present.

    John Smith: Your *fake* mother's birthday present.

    Jane Smith: The point is, you are *always* the first to break team.

    John Smith: You don't want a team, you want a servant for hire.

    Jane Smith: I want someone I can count on.

    John Smith: [sigh] Jane, there's no *air* around you anymore.

    Jane Smith: [irritated] Oh. OK, what is that supposed to mean?

    John Smith: That means there's no room for mistakes, no mistakes whatsoever. No spontaneity. Who can answer to that?

    Jane Smith: Well, you don't have to. Because this isn't even a real marriage.

    [brooding silence]

    Benjamin: [locked up in the back of the van, in a bewildered voice] *Who are you people?*

    Jane Smith: [yelling] Shut up!

  • John Smith: Careful, Jane. I can push the button any time I like.

    Jane Smith: Baby, you couldn't find the button with both hands and a map.