Steven Soderbergh (2017)
The Logan family is West Virginia proud, and a little cursed. Jimmy romanticizes John Denver to his daughter while tinkering with his aged pick-up. Clyde is a technician when it comes to mixology at the town's bar. And Mellie chops years off of ladies' appearance at the cozy barber shop.
The siblings found their respective fits, but Jimmy is gradually losing his place. Picking up his daughter, Sadie, means knocking on a mansion door in overalls. His ex-wife has upgraded, but he does not seem to mind. Sadie was always his greatest treasure, and riches have minimal domain over him. But his mountaineer comfort is expiring.
Clyde speaks with deliberate spacing. His words only mean as much as the pauses between them. Jimmy respects his brother with canine loyalty. Clyde's superstitions do not hold weight with Jimmy, but believing the theory of a hexed lineage is only liable to make one timid. Jimmy gets drunk off of opportunity, and Clyde sounds alarms of collateral damages. Together, they find an equilibrium of homegrown precision.
The boys are only 2/3 of the dream team though. Well maybe just half of it. The adhesive to every joint is Mellie. Her greatest advantage is her unsuspecting swagger. A confident sway that leaves bystanders robbed blind. Even though she is the driver, she often rides in the backseat. But then again, you always get bit from the snake you did not see.
The bonds within the family and the accomplices they hand select speak to the genuine roots bedded in their Appalachian makeup. They can trust one another because they are kin with their neighbors. They are not required to divulge all the nitty gritty details of their schemes, but they do owe honesty and equality with their partners.
Intelligence is not geographically monopolized. Cunning and forethought can find refuge in any common man or woman's mind. The brilliance of unexpected victories place figures in regional folklore. Their crimes are forgiven before they are committed, and a multitude of the unheard strikes laughter audible to the highest of offices. Luck falls on the deserving, and fortune rains on the humble.
The Logan family is West Virginia proud, and a little cursed. Jimmy romanticizes John Denver to his daughter while tinkering with his aged pick-up. Clyde is a technician when it comes to mixology at the town's bar. And Mellie chops years off of ladies' appearance at the cozy barber shop.
The siblings found their respective fits, but Jimmy is gradually losing his place. Picking up his daughter, Sadie, means knocking on a mansion door in overalls. His ex-wife has upgraded, but he does not seem to mind. Sadie was always his greatest treasure, and riches have minimal domain over him. But his mountaineer comfort is expiring.
Clyde speaks with deliberate spacing. His words only mean as much as the pauses between them. Jimmy respects his brother with canine loyalty. Clyde's superstitions do not hold weight with Jimmy, but believing the theory of a hexed lineage is only liable to make one timid. Jimmy gets drunk off of opportunity, and Clyde sounds alarms of collateral damages. Together, they find an equilibrium of homegrown precision.
The boys are only 2/3 of the dream team though. Well maybe just half of it. The adhesive to every joint is Mellie. Her greatest advantage is her unsuspecting swagger. A confident sway that leaves bystanders robbed blind. Even though she is the driver, she often rides in the backseat. But then again, you always get bit from the snake you did not see.
The bonds within the family and the accomplices they hand select speak to the genuine roots bedded in their Appalachian makeup. They can trust one another because they are kin with their neighbors. They are not required to divulge all the nitty gritty details of their schemes, but they do owe honesty and equality with their partners.
Intelligence is not geographically monopolized. Cunning and forethought can find refuge in any common man or woman's mind. The brilliance of unexpected victories place figures in regional folklore. Their crimes are forgiven before they are committed, and a multitude of the unheard strikes laughter audible to the highest of offices. Luck falls on the deserving, and fortune rains on the humble.
final words:
THEFT IS TWO-SIDED