Dallas Buyers Club's image of the protagonist who sells drugs is closer to reality, which is different from the domestic I'm not a drug god's protagonist who is often compared. For life saving, multiple emotional withdrawals, Ron in the film is an ordinary low-level bastard. Gambling, promiscuity, drug addiction, swear words, and almost all the bad habits of social rubbish he has occupied, but the film gradually and clearly shows him as a Texas tough guy by not deliberately sensationalizing, but just narrating a story. In appearance, he had the courage to fight, but he was just an ordinary person, selfish enough, all his arrogance and arrogance disappeared in front of the disease, he tried to end his life in the car, but in the end he didn't. At that time, Ron just wanted to live the simplest idea, and later he had bigger ambitions, but it was only selfish to make money. The process of transformation was very subtle. At the end, he was no longer interested in money. Not for profit, when he saw the lingering life of those patients, and the ruthless indifference of the Food and Drug Administration, and even more indifference to human life, Ron had already achieved that he would rather sell his car just to fight the disease, and to the Food and Drug Administration and the medical system. resistance. Compared with Medicine God, he has more self-redemption, truthfulness and unyielding. He completed it in seven years, reflecting the value of his life. Aside from these characters of Ron himself, it is worth remembering. He seems tough and doesn't care about everything, and he has no mercy for the world. In the beginning, he was "homophobic" like most cowboys, until in the end he found out that this was an unusual friendship, and when it started, it ended with mutual sympathy, no promises or confessions, just hidden in the dialogue. transformation. Just like his cynical, foul-mouthed exterior, there is also a delicate heart and a real tough guy spirit. And everything is clearly explained by Matthew McConaughey. This is the most valuable part of the film. We never know where life will go, but we will never give in to it anyway. Will resist, resist for ourselves, the photo at the beginning and the end of the film, and Ron, who is finally fixed on the back of the cow, has really lived a life. . .
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