Everyone stands on their own stand, throwing aside personal right and wrong, conflicts, contradictions, and reconciliations between each other, and they are intertwined. At the same time, no one can be perfect. Everyone protects their own beliefs, honors, and families from their respective positions. However, the more they protect, the more they tear each other apart, which even brings resentment and hatred. The hatred left between (they) is probably also planted between the two children (at the moment when the two children look at each other at the end of the film), and at the same time, the estrangement between each individual has increased.
View more about A Separation reviews