The scene in which Morton bribes Frank's men to working for himself instead has two poignant aspects. The first is that earlier in movie Morton pointed out to Frank that the only thing that could stop a bullet was a large amount of money and this is exactly what Morton figuratively does in this scene. The second poignant thing is that Morton wants to see the Pacific and has a painting of the waves to represent this in this train car. There is no music in this scene, it is very tense and quiet. In fact the only thing that can be heard in the scene is the sound of the train idling (puffing). It sounds like waves hitting the shore.
Scritto da il 05-03-2025 alle ore 07:32

Consiglia

Voto

Nessun dato in archivio

Commenti

Nessun dato in archivio

Film


C'era una volta il West (1968)

Persone

Nessun dato in archivio

SerieTv

Nessun dato in archivio