At some occasional opportunity, Amway was cast in this American drama.
So, on rainy weekends, I made a cup of tea and stayed in my room. With the gloomy and dull tones in the play, it fits the scene.
To tell the truth, at the beginning, there was a kind of condescending scrutiny. The brains of imperialism are really developed. Wouldn't it be true?
Original author Atwood described it this way: "Remember, all the details I use in this book are historical. In other words, it is not science fiction."
As far as I am concerned after watching the whole play, I can only say: under the guise of ideals, it is retrograde and reversed, but it is beautified with outrageous morality, which is more disgusting than the emperor's new clothes.
On the one hand, there are anti-human morality and systems, which deeply suppress human nature. The so-called great love, order, and rules are just masks for the top people in the pyramid; but the bottom of the society has paid for it with self-respect, freedom, and even their own lives. .
This kind of devouring of the top food chain is even more cruel than the strong eating of the weak in the animal world.
It was not the catastrophe at the moment when the brutality came, but it was still able to end in an instant. It is a feeling of suffocation that is dark, dark, dark, with no end in sight.
The deep sea is claustrophobic and the desert trekking. Open your eyes, you know you're alive, but you don't know how long you'll be alive.
You even want to end your own life to escape this suffocating helplessness. But sorry, you, have no control over your own life.
Funny and sad.
Everything about you is like a ?, nesting in the water, but the temperature of the water cannot be controlled by you.
Thumping, jumping, instinctive instincts have long since been wiped out after many cruelties
And those people, as long as they move the temperature control valve in their hands, or even pose with their hands, you will just stay still.
You are awake, pretending to be asleep.
After you fall asleep, everything is about to never wake up.
View more about The Handmaid's Tale reviews