I don’t know where to start, whether it is the sincere friendship between the poor or the hypocrisy and power of the rich (the film seems to be too clear about good and evil), or the advantages and disadvantages of public and private institutions, the requirements for admissions and how to make money, or the parents Everyone knows the rules they obey silently.
satire everywhere
1. Raj started out in business and got money in a proper way, but was rejected because his gestures did not match the temperament of the nobles.
2. In India, one of the symbols of high society is to speak fluent English, and the laborer is ecstatic that his son has learned a few words of English, but what is the use?
3. Eager to change the status quo, the staff who dared to question were "given" by the principal to verify the authenticity of all poor families, but the Raj family succeeded in getting through.
4. In the end, when her father explained everything to the principal, she was not offended, she put it lightly, and she could turn black and white with a dashing wave of her hand.
The principal is right in a certain way. In colleges with high tuition fees, even if poor students have the opportunity to enter, it is difficult for them to integrate. However, depriving them of their power and pretending to be saints is a pale excuse. How to solve this situation, no solution. Raj sent his daughter to a public school, but he invested in and improved it, and the quality of teaching is not inferior to that of private schools. (There is a little doubt here. The film seems to equate the results of extracurricular activities in the school with the quality of the school. Can the academic gap be bridged? Perhaps because of the limited length of the film, it is inconvenient to go into details.)
The laborers have their own rules of survival in the slums. They know that sometimes they have to yell at them to win their rights, but they have to be respectful in the face of government officials. For the few rations, they know what it's like to "sleep on an empty stomach."
What is their day like? Get up at 5 o'clock, squeeze into the "big space" bus, and go to work on the assembly line. They were limited to the number of times they went to the toilet, two opportunities per person per day, because going once would "wasted" 5 minutes of the company. If you are lucky, you can go home without being deducted. At home, always be alert to "mosquitoes", because that is the representative of death. They lined up to receive their watches with high hopes, imagining that they were the "lucky one", but they didn't know that everything was being controlled by the ice-cold note. What if it was really too poor to sustain it? You can't rob a bank because there's surveillance there. But you can "touch porcelain". If you are injured, you may not go to the clinic, but you must get the money.
They are too innocent. Raj is about to reveal the truth twice, but the workers are thinking "they were once rich and now they are in trouble" and "did your boss write a letter of recommendation to Pia". When he wanted to cry when he lost the election, he said, "Poverty is just like this, and I don't have the right to be sad and happy."
Does the role of an educational advisor sound familiar? This is very similar to the teachers who sell classes in the tutoring agency, but they are more advanced. By comparison, sell anxiety to parents. When your self-conscious daughter is afraid to say "twinkle twinkle little star, how i wonder what you are", other people's children can already explain dinosaurs and speak many languages. They can even pua adults, "a single word can ruin a child's life", and they teach parents how to dress, how to interview, and how to walk on the edge of the law when necessary. Coupled with the tea hawkers and the principal behind the scenes, this education industry chain seems to be too perfect. There are parents who recommend customers, bold media exposure, indignant speeches by the principal, and an open and transparent lottery. Everything is so fair and every parent believes that their child has a bright future.
Hahaha, so much to say. As I write this, I recall some of my own real experiences. The teacher of the pre-examination counseling agency took my grades and said "hard-heartedly", "You can't even get your grades in Nanjing's two books." At the end of the post-test interview training, the agency staff received internal news that a one-minute self-introduction session was added to the interview, and the next day was as expected. The neighbor's child, Xiaoshengchu 30w failed to go to his favorite junior high school...
Everything is absurdly just right.
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