This is a movie that should not be watched at night, let alone watch it alone at night! Even when I was scoring, I didn't dare to recommend it! Because it is horrible. This kind of horror is because the people who commit crimes are ordinary people around them. Those adults and teenagers smile at you every day. If they don’t see it with their own eyes, who would believe in the gloom of human nature?
It is similar to "Crimes in the Pastoral" in that it is a small group, both are juvenile crimes, and they are all crimes connivanced by adults. The whole story is a closed crime. The heroes and heroines are all fleeing in the unmanned forest park. The atmosphere has been suppressed until the end, and there is no place where people can breathe a sigh of relief!
What impressed me was the attitude of the last adult, who took over the child’s evil, the origin of the evil, and the continuation of the evil, which was vividly manifested. The seeds of sin have been planted long ago, and have grown and sprouted from generation to generation. . . . . .
There are a few details that you have already mentioned. Here I will post them up close:
1. The heroine is a teacher.
2. On the way the actor drove to Eden Lake, the announcer on the radio said: "Learning to respect is an important issue in the last election. Prime Minister Blair hopes to bring the idea of mutual respect back to school and the community. Therefore, parents are encouraged to participate in how to behave. Parents’ suggestions for lessons have been supported by more and more parents." "I’m going to solve my own problems."
3. When I arrived in the town, I was ready to park. It happened that a car left and there was a free parking space, but the actor was about to park. At that time, a car came ahead and parked in that seat first. It seemed that it was the parents who got off the bus.
4. The little boy the hero and heroine met in the forest told them that his mother would not let him talk to strangers.
5. The actor complained to the waiter in the restaurant about the bad things the little boys did, and the answer was that he was not our kid.
6. The protagonist wants to get out of the car when passing by Bright's house and complain to Bright's parents, leaving the heroine in the car. Later, Bright's father drove back because the heroine had parked the car in front of the house and could not move away in time and called the heroine "idiot".
7. When the heroine finally returned to the town, the town was gathering together, playing the music "Please believe us we ain't ever gonna be respectable"
8. In Bright's house, Bright commented on her dog-it is strange to him People are not friendly.
9. When Bright's father wanted to deal with the heroine, someone came to persuade him. Bright's father said, "We just need to take care of ourselves."
In addition, I would like to add that on the
first night in the town, the heroine and heroine saw that a woman's education to a child was a rude slap.
After the heroine woke up, the woman who looked after her next to her saw the ring and asked if it was so beautiful if it was given by her husband. She stretched out her hand to touch it, feeling very greedy.
As soon as the heroine enters the toilet, she sees that two people are having sex, which is a visible indulgence.
What Claire's father said was the same as the one when he hit the other parent, in the same way that Claire dragged the other children into the water.
There is also a characteristic depiction of the Peggy’s girl in the film. The girl does not speak when she comes on stage. She is shockingly swearing when she speaks, and she has always been expressionless, as cold and ruthless as Claire, as if she is Claire’s little girlfriend. It wasn't until later that he saw Claire kill his companion with his own eyes that he fled decisively with a look of fear. The little girl’s mother later heard about the child’s death and cried and said, they are just children!
This sentence is very problematic. The key is, whose children are they? If sex and violence, selfishness, and greed flood the environment in which children grow up, and educate children who are guilty and gloomy, as parents, can they just say that they are just children? Can you be selfish enough to protect your children and lynch the victims?
The small town is a microcosm, and the entire society and the entire form of education are actually pathological. Real education is not just chanting slogans. To be a parent, you must really be qualified, reverse right and wrong, and distorted personality. It's really terrible!
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