The plot is floating clouds, and the extension is...

Maximillian 2022-12-24 20:12:49

I read a lot of comments on this movie, and finally my own thoughts are: In

a family, parents and parents have the greatest influence on their children. By precepts and deeds, the usual dealings with others will affect the child.

So it's not that poverty or wealth are the main factors that determine the future of a child. How parents treat their children and what kind of growth environment they give them (people are always swayed by the environment) are the most important.

What I want to talk about is the environment. It is true that the rich can provide a better living environment, or the starting point is higher, but if the rich is a person who can do everything for money, how will this affect the children; and If the family is very poor and even needs funding to go to school, but the parents are upright people and teach their children from an early age that "gentlemen love money and get the right way", what impact will this have on the children? (This is just an example, not a hatred of the rich.)

Just like the small town in the film, decadent, deserted, and most importantly, no hope can be seen. In contrast, after being sent to the later family, the children are sunny, and there are also Hope. The action of the heroine is definitely wrong, but her original intention is good.

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The Tall Man quotes

  • Julia Denning: The system is broken, it doesn't work. There's no where to turn, no support. I've seen it all over the world, it's just easier to give up. I'm not any better than you, Mrs. Johnson, I've just seen more. It's not a matter of being a good person or being a bad person, it's about how you cope. We're so limited. But the eyes of every child are filled with potential and hope, and we need to embrace and nourish that potential. But we don't, and we continue to make the same mistakes, and we continue to let the children grow up broken and lost, just like their parents.

  • Lieutenant Dodd: Hang in there, Tracy.

    Tracy: Yeah, I've been doing that for 35 years.