8 movies a man needs to watch in his life, teach you how to become a real man

1. "Angry Bull" is adapted from the autobiographical novel of boxer Jack La Motta. It is a classic boxing film. The protagonist Jack encounters ups and downs, has been a boxing champion, fought in fake matches, went to jail, and has experienced love failure and career difficulties. Boxing is a platform for Jack to challenge life and surpass himself. It is also a battlefield where he suffers from unequal treatment and frustration. De Niro gained 60 pounds for the film and won the Oscar for this film.

2. "Brave Heart" Mel Gibson directed and acted by himself and won multiple Oscars. This film completely failed from a historical perspective, but it is definitely a classic from an epic perspective. The collection of elements of heroic films such as childhood misery, love, revenge, war, betrayal, torture, etc., coupled with the climax of the plot and the melodious Scottish bagpipes, makes people cry even if they know that the plot does not match the historical facts.

3. "Fight Club" If "American Beauty" has dug the graves of middle-aged American souls, then "Fight Club" is directed at their next generation. Through subversive themes, it reveals the embarrassment and contradictions at the intersection of society and culture at the end of the century. It is the spiritual totem of the new generation at the end of the century. Just as men need to subvert, they need to destroy themselves in the fight between the soul and the flesh to feel that they are doing a great thing. I think this is the role of male hormones. In fact, sometimes destruction is equal to rebirth, and this process is subversion.

4. "Pulp Fiction" ghost Quentin expresses the evil in "Pulp Fiction" with the most intuitive and extreme artistic technique. Everyone in the film is deeply guilty of sins, drug abuse, profligacy, and evil deeds. It has become the best medium for shocking and contemplating the audience, and the deepening of layers, through the particularly superb dialogue and performance, has turned vulgarity into a kind of film aesthetics so well.

5. "Forrest Gump" Every time I think of Forrest Gump running between the east and west coasts of the United States, I can't stop feeling sad and excited. Would you believe in the success of a mentally retarded child? Do you believe that the people who get the most in this world are those who do not count gains or losses? Do you believe that you will know the theory that there are other flavors by always trying new chocolates? In fact, he doesn't deliberately express it, but he understands the true value of transcendence, which is to keep trying, keep running, and keep doing what he thinks should be done. In addition, "Forrest Gump" will also teach you a quality that a man must have-a sense of humor in a difficult situation.

6. "The Shawshank's Redemption" can live in 15 years of painful prison life without giving up the yearning for freedom and without compromising the arrangements given by fate. What kind of spiritual power is this? So he succeeded, successfully regaining freedom.

7. "When Happiness Knocks on the Door" Will Smith, played by Will Smith, finally applied for the job. He contributed one of his best performances: Hearing that he was admitted, he did not shout with excitement, but suppressed his emotions and walked into the street. Above, in the endless stream of people, wept silently and excitedly.

8. The film "Call Me Number One" tells that Brad Cohen is a patient with Tourette's disease, who will unconsciously twitch his limbs and make strange noises. He has always been treated in a different light, and his classmates bullied him. It wasn't until a principal named Mel explained everything to the whole school at the school concert that Brad began to be truly understood and accepted by everyone, and principal Mel also changed Little Brad. He aspires to become a teacher. With gradual and unremitting efforts, Brad finally became a Cohen teacher who was respected, loved and supported by people around him.