The Great Gatsby is a great representation of how a man's uncontrollable love for a woman could end up being the death of himself. He offered to give everything he had for the woman he so desperately longed for and when the time came she could not even send a rose to his untimely grave.
This piece also shows how females are not only drawn towards someone through sheer love but are also tempted by a man's public status and worldly riches. Gatsby has always loved Daisy and has shown her nothing but care while her Husband Tom only showed his "love" for Daisy on rare occasions. Gatsby shows devotion and loyalty throughout the entire story while Tom is seen sleeping with other women from time to time. Gatsby is also willing to make his riches through unlawful acts of bootlegging just to give her an extra incentive to come back to him so that Daisy doesn't feel like she is leaving her current "high-status" husband for a nobody named Gatsby. He offers her an unbelievable amount of love, care, riches, and attention but she still manages to throw everything back into his face when she accidentally murders her husband's mistress.
Even though Daisy didn't initially pin the murder claim on Gatsby, She still ends up doing so later on. After Gatsby got murdered she could've confessed to what she had done wrong to clear up her "true love" name but instead, she decided to pin the blame on Gatsby and run off with her High-status husband acting as if everything Gatsby has offered her never really meant much to her in the first place.
In today's terms, this movie represents the idea of how "nice guys always finish last"
conclusion:
- great story with good pacing
- great actors for each role
- great cinematography