When two friends discover a giant insect in the trunk of a stolen car, they embark on an unforgettable adventure involving mistaken identity, money, and a homeless man. Along the way, they encounter various obstacles including a trailer on fire, a car breakdown, and a see-through shirt. Will they be able to overcome these challenges and find their way back home?
The Sun Also Rises (1957) is a film adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's novel about a group of American and British expatriates who travel from Paris to Pamplona for the running of the bulls and the bullfights. The story centers around Jake Barnes, an American journalist and World War I veteran, who is in love with Lady Brett Ashley. As they navigate their relationships, the characters confront themes of love, masculinity, sexuality, and the search for meaning in a post-war world.
The film evokes all the aspects of bullfighting - its history, the bulls, the toreros, the arena, the audience - and involves numerous matadors from the era.
Jackie Burroughs stars as Maryse Holder, the ill-fated feminist author who met an untimely death in Acapulco. Her attitude of cultural and racial condescension toward Mexican men was to regard them as nothing more than beasts of burden for her own sexual pleasure, and her hedonistic pursuits of sex and drugs led to her death at the hands of one of her many boytoys.
A bullfighter is about to strike the last and deadly blow to a bull that is tired but does not plan to give up. At the decisive moment, the bull will dodge the lethal blow, which will allow him to decide what to do with his seemingly defeated opponent.
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