This film is a lightning rod of a movie. Your political stripe should not keep you from seeing it. The protagonist is someone that many (even progressives) can relate to, and is a study in how one can be pulled into any direction if the circumstances line up. How many of us have had our cars run into the ground simply because we cannot afford the proper repairs, making buying a new one a pipe dream? A steady diet of the internet can warp impressionable minds, and Ronny sure needed some guidance in controlling his anger, but was lauded by the subscribers and viewers of his material. This was his domain, and he was king. ...for a while, anyway. I kept thinking that, had he met one person that could steer him in the right direction, he might have had a better life, but there was nobody real in his life. Most will see where this film is going, but the tension is palpable, and the third act does not disappoint. For those of you calling him an incel, he fits the profile, but technically that title does not apply to him. I empathized with his problems and anger at things we cannot control, but his overt racism made it harder to embrace him in full. We all have problems, and our country is very divided at the moment, so it was refreshing to see our modern problems represented in film. I did not come away thinking all conservatives are Ronny, but if you keep up with current events, we know that Ronny's story is not an unbelievable one. It will be an eye opening look at what is happening in a country where full time jobs are scarce, and we have been getting less and less for more money. Most folks haven't seen a raise in twenty years or more. Things are tough all over, but to blame your problems on entire races and religions is just a gigantic cop out, That bootstrap nonsense doesn't apply, when real jobs just do not exist for people without any real skill set, and Ronny had no discernible skills, and may have been suffering from the Dunning Krueger effect. Anyway, this is one of those films that you can talk about for longer than the run time of the movie, and in any cinephile's book, that is a win. Not unlike gangsta rap, this movie gives perspective to the life of a movement, and a system that can be tough to navigate. Bottom line: Ronny made some bad, bad choices, so what happens is on him. Not the alt-right, not the libs. It was always ever only on him.