Compassion is what everyone has. Saving black men is a kind of impulse; fighting back against high school students is an instinctive manifestation of self-preservation.
Father Sanding is an experienced person who understands the power of this National Holocaust Day, so when Charlie put the black man in, he couldn't help but teach Charlie who was in trouble. But Sandin's father was also moved by Charlie's kindness in the end, (the first to be moved was Mary's mother) and rebelled against the high school student who threatened him not long ago.
There is not much time to present this change of thought, and it should be said to be a failure.
Charlie has always maintained a child's innocence and opposed the National Holocaust Day. This attitude has formed a certain gap with the silence of his parents. Naturally, he is not speculative with his parents, and is usually taciturn and rebellious. Charlie couldn't understand why this day would bring peace and stability to America, all he felt was fear and anger. For the most vulnerable groups, he does not want only sympathy, but wants to save the world!
Charlie is still a kid! Kindness is not about gain or loss!
Only when he grows up will he be a little like Sanding's father. He understands that there is a measure of kindness, and it's good to try his best.
And in the public sphere, the most important thing is order. It is important to make the world a better place with personal love, but the most important thing is to create a reasonable competition order - in this order, the poor will also have dignity!
I hope Charlie, after going through this massacre day, can understand how this society is, and how the world he wants can become a reality.
This is not a horror film, but an exaggerated educational film.
View more about The Purge reviews