In the first ten minutes of the film language, Jason and his classmates talked about drugs; Sylvie carried large bags and small bags into the house; when Jason was arrested, the John family was having a happy party; John expressed dissatisfaction that Jason had not framed his friends and asked for a commutation of his sentence. The image of these fathers is like this: the ex-wife is running around to support the family, so that he has no time to discipline the children, and the father who has a new family obviously lacks enough daily care for his son, and he screams loudly.
In fact, in addition to love, there should be guilt for the undercover behavior that can support John. He felt guilty for the harm he caused to his son by the failure of the previous family and tried his best to make up for it.
Of course, if this didn't happen, Jason would just be like ordinary people, graduating from high school, going to college, going to work, marrying a wife and having children. I don't think John can let Jason continue to enjoy his love throughout his life, and he will always be an incompetent father.
For doing a difficult thing in a period of time, and persisting in doing simple things for a long time, the choice between men and women, or what they are good at is really quite different. The mother's continuous love is like fragmentation, and the father's persevering love is a whole. Therefore, I hope that every child can hold both hands when he grows up.
View more about Snitch reviews