I didn't understand the film very well, because it involved a lot of religious factors, and of course I didn't know much about Samaria and other characters in the film. But for now, I see redemption and love. One of the clues in the film is love. The girl sells herself for free in order to redeem the dead girl and let the world know the sanctity of the aid work, defending the dignity of the dead girl and paying off her guilt debt to the dead girl step by step. Another clue is the father's love. The father forced a client to death, and also killed a client. His grief for his daughter turned into anger at the client. At the end of the film, the father teaching his daughter to drive actually implies that the father is about to turn himself in. What he expresses is that he can only teach his daughter a short distance, and the rest of his life can only depend on his daughter. The father asked his daughter to go to the countryside with him to redeem his daughter and at the same time to atone for his own sins. And the tearing point of the film happens to be that at the end, the father silently did everything for his daughter, but the daughter was ignorant and didn’t know what to say. I think this was a hurried coming-of-age gift from the father in the last days of his daughter’s side. .
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