The most exciting basketball game ever

Gladys 2022-01-27 08:06:00

The male protagonist is addicted to gambling and cannot extricate himself, and gambling also drags the male protagonist into a no-man's land. The male protagonist never realizes that he is in an increasingly dangerous situation.

Accompanied by the brainwashing music in the first half, the male protagonist staged the story of borrowing money here, talking about business there, talking to people and talking to ghosts.

Here is the wife and children, and on the other is his own mistress. The one who was just beaten by the debt collector, the next second, he happily talked about his business.

He didn't realize it until his fate was destined to fail every single gamble he made.

In the end, fate seemed to play a joke. The male protagonist finally hoped that he would win, and at this moment, the plot took a sharp turn. . . .

Rough diamonds dug deep underground in another impoverished country of the world drive hungry people to action.

The brilliant rough diamond unearthed with blood and sweat tells the story of its future in detail: it is full of people's greed and self-righteousness.

View more about Uncut Gems reviews

Extended Reading
  • Flo 2022-04-24 07:01:04

    I am a person without a gambler mentality, and I have absolutely no way to build empathy with the male protagonist. It is said that the wonderful thing is to come, but I can't hold on anymore, it's so noisy...

  • Ophelia 2022-03-23 09:01:38

    As splendid as rough diamonds, or just as illusory? A journey to let material desires land in images, and a contemporary rewrite of Mean Streets. Far more than "Good Times", pressing "The Wolf of Wall Street" directly to the ground and rubbing it, from various tricks to The Weeknd, Garnett and even the entire play make it too real, the streets of New York no longer belong to Scooby Seths, it's time for the Safdie brothers to hit the road, their restlessness is the restlessness of New York and the world.

Uncut Gems quotes

  • Demany: And what the fuck is it wit' you Jewish niggas and basketball anyway? 'Uh? Shucks.

    Howard Ratner: I'll have you know the first two points scored in the NBA was a Jew.

    Demany: Yeah, yeah, who what, Fred Flintstein?

    Howard Ratner: No. Ossie Schectman, 1946, played for the Knicks.

  • High Roller: [rapidly] Last year I made 125 million dollars. I don't even know what to do with my money anymore. I have nobody to spend it with, nobody to enjoy my life with anymore. It's horrible! Today is the big day for me. I met you, you're hot! You wanna have a drink when we get there?