What really makes "Crazy Stone" transcend the limitations of a comedy, I think, is its allegorical meaning. There are a lot of movies about thieves in Western movies, showing off the superior skills of thieves, which often amazes us. This film pays homage to the famous scene in the thief-themed film "Mission: Impossible". However, even in Hollywood movies, while demonstrating the superb skills of thieves, there is also a theme that thieves have their own moral principles, which enhances the meaning of thieves' struggles. The most common ones are thieves robbing the rich and giving to the poor, or through a fight , realizing that what is more valuable is the true love of the world, makes these films transcend the function of pure thief films to teach obscenity and thievery. This film also captures the sensitive themes of criticizing reality, seeing the big from the small, and using Spring and Autumn style, which are not lacking in Chinese themes. The foreground of the film's story is the intertwined and dark battle between the three forces of the security guard and the two thieves. The most dramatic thing is that the jadeite was faked and a package was lost, so that the real jadeite was returned to the Zhao Dynasty without any effort at all. The tortuous and bizarre process in the film has a somewhat paradoxical meaning of black humor. However, if these rhetorical plots were to make up the entire film, then the entire film would be nothing more than a sketch theme, but it is precisely on this theme that the film makes a sublimation that Chinese films are often good at expressing. transformation connotation. Like "A World Without Thieves" with its deep allusion to the contemporary issues, this film also reflects a very common phenomenon in China's contemporary economic life from the opposition between the protection of jewelry and theft. In the film, Bao Shihong tried his best, worked hard, and worked even though he was sick to protect the jadeite. In the end, he was defeated by the factory director's behind-the-scenes dealings and behind-the-scenes operations, causing the jadeite to be handed over to others. To be clear, jade can be used in the film to symbolize the loss of state-owned assets, a frequent and obvious crux of China's transformation period. As a member of the existing system, Bao Shihong fulfilled his duties and effectively blocked any black hands reaching out to the target. However, his unrepentant efforts failed due to the private transactions of his powerful boss. All the hard work was wasted in vain, and many state-owned assets were not lost to thieves, but fell into the pockets of well-dressed thieves like Feng Dong during the fight. When Bao Shihong angrily rebuked the factory director, we felt that the real enemy he faced was not the outside thieves, but the boss who could look down on domestic thieves. Recall that in Chinese history, every man had a duty to protect his family and the country, and he was not weak. However, in the temple, the clouds and rains were upsetting, and he lost his power and betrayed the country, but the previous achievements were wasted. The lesson is profound. "Crazy Stone" is based on a society as small as a factory, and the story development space it aims at is also a Luohan Temple with few people. However, the background of the era it reflects can be magnified to the entire country of China. Chinese filmmakers are in the screw shell. The skill of doing the dojo here is really something that would make even God sigh. Is the hope of Chinese movies contained in this kind of modest yet shy effort to make a big impact in a small way?