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Mireille 2022-04-19 09:01:18
The only regret is the scene where Dill didn't propose.
After watching this and watching last year's musical Hamilton, I feel that the contrast is particularly stark. The vilification of the United States has become a mainstream thought in modern China due to ideological opposition and national competition. In fact, the birth of the United States is...
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Luciano 2022-03-22 09:01:13
Many mouths and gold accumulate to destroy the bones
Give a dog a bad name and hang him!
•The gossip of “boo”, is a typical representation of the prejudice of the local to people who have given up the original lifestyle. It is so extreme that all of evil personalities are imposed on them, making “boo” a horrible monster. Obviously, such...

Nancy Marshall
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Mireya 2021-10-20 19:02:18
C / I don't quite understand why this memoir narrative, which exists only as a cumbersome text, has caused a lot of misleading to the audience. The most direct drawback is to cover up the existing dual perspectives of children/adults. Fortunately, this kind of perspective tension is still drawn through the control of the narrative rhythm. The stray and bizarre experience of childhood summer and the court drama of the adult world with strict distribution of space form a completely different time quality. But the flaw is still there. The part of the adult world is described as being too regular to be able to separate the two worlds enough before they collide. The ending is indeed a clever pen to disturb the tone: the disoriented child emerges from the thick cocoon and encounters another parasitic, summoned "ghost" over time.
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Christiana 2021-10-20 19:02:19
The language of the shot can be called a model, and the conversion of the shot repeatedly uses superimposed effects; the children’s part of the story is full of tension and suspense, which spurs the audience’s appetite; the court trial, like other court trials, is inevitable preaching and sensational. Fortunately, time not long.
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Scout: Atticus, do you defend niggers?
Atticus Finch: [startled] Don't say 'nigger,' Scout.
Scout: I didn't say it... Cecil Jacobs did; that's why I had to fight him.
Atticus Finch: [sternly] Scout, I don't want you fightin'!
Scout: I had to, Atticus, he...
Atticus Finch: I don't care what the reasons are: I forbid you to fight.
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Atticus Finch: There are some things that you're not old enough to understand just yet. There's been some high talk around town to the effect that I shouldn't do much about defending this man.
Scout: If you shouldn't be defending him, then why are you doing it?
Atticus Finch: For a number of reasons. The main one is that if I didn't, I couldn't hold my head up in town. I couldn't even tell you or Jem not to do somethin' again.
[he puts his arm around her]
Atticus Finch: You're gonna hear some ugly talk about this in school. But I want you to promise me one thing: That you won't get into fights over it, no matter what they say to you.