The embodiment of the Stanford Prison Experiment, if the experiment was not stopped at that time, may have evolved into a more terrifying situation than in the film.
An ordinary person with normal psychology can easily arouse inner evil in a specific environment, beyond anyone's imagination, and the group will deepen this evil.
Part of a particular environment is closure.
When I saw this film, I thought of the Nazis, an ordinary person, in a certain group, who became a demon.
When I think of domestic violence again, some people who are very in line with social evaluation, and even some introverted and mild-mannered people, may also become the perpetrators of ferocious domestic violence. A big factor is that the family is a closed environment, a place where you can do whatever you want without being interfered or disturbed.
Some learned violence people who have experienced and witnessed domestic violence have made a new role identification with their roles, from probing, trying, and gradually becoming more and more intense.
Domestic violence is a complex, interactive phenomenon. The closed environment provides survival conditions for the occurrence of violence.
The nearly 100 recently tried protection orders issued without a single violation are not the deterrent of the protection order itself, but the breaking of the environmental closure. A behavior that cannot see the sun, as long as there is sunlight, it will converge.
This film itself is actually not very good-looking. If you want to see the embodiment of a phenomenon, it is necessary to watch it.
Whether as a group, or as an individual, in an open environment, it is relatively safe.
View more about The Experiment reviews