<h1 class= "pgc-h-arrow-right" > "Hot Day Afternoon" starring Al Pacino</h1>

Story Archetype:
Wojtowicz (Al Pacino) and friends Sal Naturale (John Kayser, godfather Rial Pacino's second brother) plan to rob a bank on August 22, 1972, in order to perform sex reassignment surgery on their fellow girlfriend. The robbery bank is located at the Chase Manhattan Bank branch of 450 Avenue P in Brooklyn, 450 East Third Street Intersection. The bank should not have been open for long.
After the failure of the crime, Wojtowicz was sentenced to 20 years in 1973, and his deeds were changed into a movie while he was in prison, although the robbery of the bank did not rob the money, but the film story copyright fee paid him $7500, plus a 1% box office dividend.
Born in New York in 1945, John Wojtowicz had a very uneventful life until the age of 15, went to Vietnam after graduating from high school, and after retiring from the army, began working at Chase Manhattan Bank, where he met his later legal wife, Carmen Bifulco. The two married in 1967, but John Wojtowicz was very conservative about his marriage.
When he served in Vietnam, he found that he had a problem with his sexual orientation, married his wife for two years after retiring from the military, and also joined the Gay Activist Alliance and met many male lovers.
In 1971, he met Ernie Aron, a woman of subconscious gender, who later changed his name to Liz Eden, and the two "married" in an informal ceremony the same year.
The gay girlfriend wants to have sex reassignment surgery, but Wojtowicz disagrees, and after Liz Eden's suicide attempt, Wojtowicz decides to fund him to do sex reassignment surgery, and if there is no money, there is only a bank robbery.
With insufficient manpower, Wojtowicz recruited two true friends who met at a gay bar, Bobby Westenberg and Salvatore Naturale, three stinkers who had raced Zhuge Liang, and said that they would do it, and no plan was their plan.
The idea of robbing the bank may have been inspired by watching "The Godfather", and later the movie that changed this matter was starred by Al Pacino, and the prototype of the event also praised Al Pacino in prison, saying that the speech was very similar!
In fact, the movie only presents the "success" case, in the prototype of the incident, they also once dropped the gun after entering the bank, three people ran away, and then the partner Bobby Westenberg quit because of fear, the three people were left, and the other Salvatore Naturale was just 18 years old.
Later, I went into the bank and found that the bank's vault was empty! In the end, only $38,000, plus $175,000, was looted from the counter. One of the clerks pressed the alarm while grabbing money.
The robbers then took all eight people in the bank hostage, and what was supposed to take only ten minutes dragged on to four hours, then ten hours, and finally the whole day, and the farce at first turned into a live broadcast, which was watched by more than a million people. More than 2,000 people gathered on the street in front of the bank, and the reporter on the scene described it as "a grand performance".
The ending is similar to that depicted in the film, with police and agents waiting for them at the airport, and as soon as the two arrive, Salvatore Naturale is shot (the only casualty of the day) and Wojtowicz is arrested.
It's all because of this "woman" Liz Eden
God restores
In the end, Wojtowicz gave the royalties to Liz Eden for sex reassignment surgery, but not long after he died of AIDS in 1983, Wojtowicz was released from prison and settled in New York with his mother, and later went to Chase Bank to interview a security guard, saying that "I am the prototype in "Hot Afternoon", "I will certainly not be robbed by anyone at your bank, and the result must be that I am not hired, and finally died of cancer in 2006."
Movie Highlights:
Although the name of the movie is called "Hot Afternoon", it also presents the feeling of summer, in fact, the shooting time should be in winter, and the actors need to take a moment of ice in their mouths before filming.
The film's outdoor scenes were filmed between 17 and 18 Prospect Park West Street on The Windsor Terrace in Brooklyn, and the interior scenes of the bank were set up in a soundstage.
There are a lot of improvisations in the film, and when Al Pacino asks John Kaiser which country he wants to go to, the answer to O'Wyming is to blurt it out. And after Al Pacino shoots in the back window, the conversation (quarrel) with Charles Dean (sheriff) at the bank door [movie 53 minutes and 30 seconds] is all free play.
The film received six nominations at the 48th Oeika Awards and won the Best Original Screenplay Award.
<h1 class= "pgc-h-arrow-right" > "What a Home"</h1>
The protagonist of this movie, the little boy is the true color. The first person in history to sue his parents for why they gave birth to themselves and why they were irresponsible. The girl who gave birth had to sell her as a wife when she had the first menarche, and the sister who was closest to him died of dystocia at the age of 12 due to dystocia.
<h1 class= "pgc-h-arrow-right" > "Sin in the American Countryside."</h1>
The film is based on a true case in Indianapolis, USA, in 1965. The girl, Sylvia (Ellen Page), who is busy with her parents at the amusement park, moves with her sister Jenny (Harley McFarland) into the home of her single mother of seven, Gertrude Barnitsowski (Catherine Catherine Keener), a single mother with seven children. Gertrude's eldest daughter, Paula (Ari Graynor), is pregnant unmarried, and Sylvia overhears the news and loses her mouth to inform her classmates, not thinking that the news will leak. Paula angered Sylvia, causing her to be physically punished by Gertrude. After this, the alcoholic Gertrude blamed all family problems on Sylvia's arrival, imprisoned her in the basement behind the back of the townspeople, and encouraged her children to torture Sylvia. Not only that, but other children in town also participated in this brutal devastation, jointly committing one of the most serious crimes committed against individuals in American history.
Two sisters who were fostered in someone else's home were inhumanly abused to the point of incontinence and eventually died.
The perpetrators were tried, and Gertrude Baniszewski denied responsibility for Sylvia Likens' death. She chose to confess her guilt because of her insanity. Four minors, Coy Hubbard, Richard Hobbs, and Paula and John Baniszewski, were tortured and murdered.
On May 19, 1966, Gertrude was convicted of first-degree murder and on May 25, he was sentenced to life imprisonment. Paula Baniszewski was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison on May 25. On the same day, Richard Hobbs, Coy Hubbard and John Baniszewski Jr, convicted of manslaughter in Sylvia, were sentenced to 21 to 21 years in prison.
Gertrude was released from prison on December 4, 1985, and died of lung cancer five years later at the age of 61.
http://www.mysticfiles.com/true-story-behind-the-movie-an-american-crime/
<h1 class= "pgc-h-arrow-right" > Girl in the Morning</h1> Light
In 1918, in a Village in Canada, the mother of a little girl, Aurele (Marianne Fortier), Hélène Bourgeois Leclerc, contracted tuberculosis and became terminally ill. Instead of showing due concern for his wife, her father (Serge Postigo) hooks up with her cousin (Stéphanie Lapointe). Soon, Marianne died of anger and melancholy, and her father soon became intimate with her cousin.
Of the three siblings, Aurora was particularly resistant to her father and stepmother. My father was busy with work and rarely asked about family matters. The conflict between Aurora and her stepmother deepened, and the stepmother gradually evolved from the initial corporal punishment to naked abuse. The delicate little girl's life hangs in the balance...
The subject matter of crimes that have changed according to the facts is the most well-known korean movies, and the highest praise in the answer has been listed a lot.
For South Korea, although a movie can change the law, it cannot change the status quo, the simplest example is the "Room N" incident some time ago.
This shows that no matter how well the film is made, it is useless, and what about changing the law? South Korea's patriarchal society and servility are difficult to change, it is a long process, looking at the world, we can know all these things, and there are many things you can't see, they will always and can only slowly struggle in the quagmire of sin, and finally disappear. People are really humble.
It is true that they are the forward force of social development, but the most important thing to improve the image of a country depends on the moral, cultural and economic averages of the people at the bottom.
above.
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