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Personal Top Ten Movies "Wild Dogs": Leading countless masters to bend their waists

author:West Wind Film Review

A mediocre work cannot have a "leopard tail", which cannot exist in isolation, but can only be an extension of crested head and pork belly, and is the transition and sublimation of the whole work from one peak to another.

In other words, the leopard tail cannot send charcoal in the snow and let the stubborn stone reveal the brilliance of the night pearl; the leopard tail can only add icing on the cake, so that a master like Akira Kurosawa can become the movie emperor worshiped by filmmakers in the East and the West.

The great wounds of the war and the humiliation of defeat made the imperial army, which was once a proud national, a street rat. "Wild Dogs" (1949) shows postwar Japanese society through the search for guns, and shows the misery of veterans being discriminated against like wild dogs who have lost their families.

The policeman who lost his gun pretended to be a veteran to secretly visit, and everywhere he was blinded, even the and the women standing on the street looked down on him:

Personal Top Ten Movies "Wild Dogs": Leading countless masters to bend their waists

The police officer ostensibly analyzes the robber: "The money he snatched will soon run out, and he will rob it again, and next time it will be more fierce, from a wild dog to a mad dog." "It is a satire that japan, which is poor in resources, tasted the sweetness from the Sino-Japanese war and the Russo-Japanese War, and fell into the abyss of World War II. Silent, three points into the wood.

The stadium guards the rabbit to catch the fan criminals, and won the Oscar for best foreign language film "Enigmatic Eyes" (2009) tribute.

The ending drama is full of power, showing the charm of the master, and becoming a textbook for famous masterpieces———

The sword was rattled, and suddenly there was a beautiful piano sound, and the fierce flames laughed and welcomed the spring breeze alone:

The passages looking for people at the station are homaged to Spielberg's Duel (1971); a group of children passing by and singing are honored with Fellini's Night of Cabilla (1957) and Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in America (1984); and the footage of remorse and tearing tears makes fellini's "The Great Road" (1954) a leopard tail.

"Stray Dog" Leopard Tail:

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