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"Yellowstone Season 3" look and feel

author:Shang Qingyun

The third season began to blacken Jammy from the plot, but it was a bit clumsy, how could a child think of neutering his own sister, here the director and screenwriter actually want to highlight a point, this person is inherently evil, so in order to cut with this "righteous" family, it leads to the brain hole that Jammy is adopted. Judging from the ending, Jammy may be the big boss in the fourth season, to show that the decline of the family will inevitably cause Xiao Wall. The real big boss in the third season is the Wall Street represented by The Market Securities. That is to say, a family with a history of 7 generations with the typical style of the American West has met the concentrated embodiment of modern financial capitalism---- Wall Street predator. This collision is actually very interesting, Beth is the main person in charge, but the battle inside is actually not very exciting, maybe the director has not seen "Big Time", will not shoot financial warfare, feel a bit of a tiger tail, especially the last episode, feel a little rushed to finish the meaning.

In fact, the most wonderful thing about this season is to say the Americans' own observations of the United States through the mouth of the Indians: the United States has always made two sets of rules, the master rule and the slave rule, if you just want to follow the slave rule, you can't defeat the United States no matter what, that is, point out the core of the United States' competitiveness: the right to speak. It lists treaties created by the United States, withdraws from treaties once they are unfavorable to them, and then creates new treaties to deter followers. This is actually vividly reflected in Trump's recent trade war. This is what we mean by "American double standard". Sadly, the domestic elite, especially the elite group represented by Tsinghua University, which is related to American capital, always intentionally or unintentionally ignores this point.

Also wonderful is the problem of selling or not selling farms, 50,000 acres of land, which were taken from the Indians 7 generations ago and are now worth $500 million. If you sell it, you can pass on the wealth of generations, and if you don't sell it, it is likely to be eaten away by the government in the form of taxation. This question is thrown to the audience, who actually chooses cash, but John still chooses his promise to his father, wanting land, not money. This was not another Indian war, except that the two sides of the war became farmers (Indians) and capital (Europeans).

I believe that the fourth season may give the director's point of view and plan. See!