Empathy In The Warriors

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Let's hope you're a fan of fight scene after fight scene because if not, you'll find yourself fighting to continue watching The Warriors. The 1979 movie is about gangs in New York City in the 1970s. In the movie, a gang called The Warriors are wrongfully accused of shooting an influential gang member named Cyrus that was working to unite all gangs together. As the movie develops, The Warriors are racing to their home at Coney Island as various gangs are searching for them to gain revenge. Prepare yourself to be confused when watching The Warriors as it is a monotonous film that will leave you with a multitude of unsatisfying answers. Furthermore, Hill underdeveloped the characters, creates empathy for the gang, has predictable cinematography, staged performances, and fails to relay the purpose of this movie. Director Walter Hill does a poor job with character development in The Warriors, making it difficult to connect and engage in the interactions between characters. The only character with some substance is Luther, the leader of …show more content…

This movie robs the audience of any sort of explanation about why they spent an hour and a half watching it. There are only two basic questions that need answering: did they make it to Coney Island and were the real murderers exposed? There's no resolution or gain at the end, the conclusion was so basic anyone could guess how it ends. Nothing enlightening can be gained from this movie, there are no questions that remain unanswered, there are no motives that can be questioned and it's disappointing to come to the end and notice a void of satisfaction due to the simplicity of the of plot and motive. There was a sense of too much resolution that it became basic and meaningless. The Warriors leaves audiences without a sense of satisfaction because of the lack of complexity by the end of the

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