a5c7b9f00b The bonds of brotherhood, the laws of loyalty, and the futility of violence in the shadows of the US Mexico border gang wars. I think this movie is great, it has been a long time since I have seen such beautiful brotherly love. I love their treatment to each other, even so at times I thought it was sad. <br/><br/>The landscape is breathtaking. I lived in cities all my life and never been inland but this scenery made me want to plan to road trip the country. I love cowboys movies and this one is a different kind of western with a development of characters and a story line that grabbed me from the first line and didn&#39;t let me go until the last. And the horse was so beautiful I wanted to hug and kiss too. <br/><br/>And so it is that I like this movie so much I am writing about it. And this is the first time I do so, not so much to recommend it but to process it for I wish there was a discussion going on to ask about the things I did not understand. Thanks.- Asilocreo As &quot;Broken Horses&quot; was drawing to a close, I formulated my review. I had just one sentence: &quot;You could do worse than spend a totally free evening –when there&#39;s no cricket, even–watching this movie.&quot;<br/><br/>It is just a yarn, spun without imagination, and that yarn isn&#39;t substantial enough to be woven into a unique design.<br/><br/>There were a couple of twists and turns, some modicum of suspense, many efforts to get the tear ducts opening, but all through I kept thinking, &quot;This is kind of embarrassing.&quot; If the movie theater had been full, I dare say there would have been guffaws at the flat story-telling and the clunky dialogs. That would have amused me.<br/><br/>With movies on familiar themes you want slick treatment, snappy dialog, and a sound-track that tells some of the story without the aid of words. And in this movie where music is a major theme, I really missed the magic an original score and sound-effects can play.<br/><br/>That&#39;s it. You aren&#39;t likely to go bananas about any aspect of this film, except may be the photography. Having seen this, I am not dying to see &quot;Parinda&quot; either. While Chopra attempts to crack the American market with a slice of cinematic apple pie, he holds up a mirror to how Hollywood's tried-and-true narrative of vigilantism connotes who we are, at home and overseas.
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