One question - why did Michael go to that hillside?

Xzavier 2022-03-16 09:01:04

This movie is pretty good, at least I can

watch it more smoothly than I have nowhere to go. I just have a question, such as the title. I watched it carefully, and several clues in the movie seem to be connected: the child Henry called Arthur and said a book What and the book of conquest, later after Arthur's death, Michael went to Arthur's residence alone in the middle of the night and saw the narrow red book (with a copy shop note in it), and the illustration in the book was the one A hillside with a few horses!

But what's the connection between these? Why did Michael go to that hillside after he got out of the driver's house? He should have only known that the car had a problem with the navigator, but he didn't know that the car had been bombed.

Which senior can answer? Thank you

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Extended Reading
  • Alexandria 2021-11-27 08:01:17

    As a director's debut, it is indeed quite amazing. Perhaps the story is not brilliant, but the narrative method is really appetizing. And Clayton's character image is becoming more and more three-dimensional as the plot develops, and many details are also worth digging deeper. The actors are brilliant, as well as the old Pollack. nice

  • Grayce 2022-04-22 07:01:15

    People's luck can't stop it

Michael Clayton quotes

  • Michael Clayton: Uncle Timmy- and I mean this- on his best day, he was never as tough as you. And I'm not talking about crying or the drugs. I'm talking about in his heart. You understand me?

    Henry Clayton: Okay.

    Michael Clayton: Big Tim... Uncle Boss... all his charming bullshit. And I know you love him. And I know why. But when you see him like this, you don't have to be afraid, because it's not how it's gonna be for you. You're not gonna be one of those people who goes through life wondering why shit keeps falling out of the sky around them. You have some real steel in you, Henry. Inside. I see it every time I look at you. I see it right now.

    [tries to smile]

    Michael Clayton: I don't know where the hell you got it from, but you got it.

  • Interviewer: So, with all that pressure and workload, how do you keep a balance between work and life?

    Karen Crowder: Balance?

    [laughs]

    Karen Crowder: I think that's, um, that's something that you search for your whole life, isn't it? Um,

    [Scene cuts to Karen getting ready]

    Karen Crowder: It's a shifting balance, really. It's, um, you know. You try to, um...

    [She stops, rubs her temples, then the scene cuts again to when she's more fully dressed, looking in the mirror]

    Karen Crowder: When you really are enjoying what it is you do, who needs balance? There's your balance! There's your balance. When you're really enjoying what it is you do, there's your balance.