Many studies have shown that adolescent frontal lobe function is not fully developed, and the prefrontal cortex is involved in impulse control. And most of us did more or less bizarre things during adolescence, but maybe not a few like in "Lake Eden". And that's where else, the movie has a meaningful echo in the car's radio sound - the question of education. Then connect to the growth environment of that group of children: slutty, impulsive, poorly educated, stick education concept, maybe even jailed (the leader mocks the minion: Have you ever been in jail? Have your family ever been in jail?) In the image of the parents, all this is not difficult to understand.
In addition to parents, there is also social culture. The male protagonist wants the children to turn down the volume. They listen to hip-hop music, the violence, drugs, and sex that black bubbles often carry. The children can't understand the irony in them, so they choose to Pay attention to the criminal element and internalize it as a value. The leader touched the blood on the face of the minion, and called it: Scarface. This is from a gangster movie. The child is still internalized and then internalized.
As for whether there is any mention of the national conditions of the United Kingdom, as a foreign audience, it is not very clear, but I think the director's discussion mainly focuses on the above aspects.
In the film, parents defend their children: they are just children. This will rise to another level of discussion. The discussion at this level of "Eden Lake" is not too detailed. For movies related to this level, you can go to Mads Mikkelsen's "Hunting".
I think "they are just children." This can also be called a kind of reverse discrimination: while paying attention to children's human rights, have you ever thought that the adults standing by your side have the same human rights?
Even as I said at the beginning, it is not difficult to find that people who are exposed to the media, literary and artistic works, and are concerned about the society, the topic of teenagers is happening all the time. In any corner of the earth, around us, you just choose to avoid not see. It's like you can hear Higgins reciting English literature in an English accent massaging your ears, watching Yimei's eyes with alluring colors until your heart melts, kneeling and licking Jason Stein Sen's hormonal sexy muscles, but you can't ignore the young man on the street that you can't help but want to rush up to help him lift his pants, or you can't be immersed in the beauty of Keira Knightley or Emma Watson. Pull yourself out, and you can't deny a bunch of women who have eaten too many potatoes and are plump and pierced all over their bodies. The two sides of things always coexist, and neither is the real world.
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