Class shit, resist your sister

Kurtis 2022-09-03 14:49:29

Whether it’s a comment or a brief introduction, all the damn angry youths feel empathetic.

When the nanny pays nothing, he lives and drives a car, he doesn’t know how to manage school, he doesn’t have glasses, and he is free to give employers a cold face. Employers open their eyes and close their eyes. In the end, grace avenged revenge and extorted murder, how did it become the resistance of the weak? There are movies about class struggle, but where do you see the oppression and exploitation of the poor by the rich?

Some people are uneducated, but their self-esteem is terrible. A book full of low self-esteem, locked up and hidden in a drawer. Obviously people are not stupid, but they just don't learn. They just want to put on a swollen face to fill a fat man, pretend, and resist, thinking that if you wear plain sunglasses, no one knows that you are illiterate.

So what is this movie about? It's simple: illiterate, cover your ears and steal the bells. Exposed, became angry, and murdered the whole family.

I know that "don't watch the movie if you don't understand it" is really a curse when you say it. But people have self-knowledge. It’s not very demanding to take a photo of yourself before typing on the keyboard, right?

Don’t fucking think you’ll follow the trend and write a movie review, no one knows you’re illiterate

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Extended Reading

La Cérémonie quotes

  • Georges Lelievre: [referring, respectively, to Sophie the illiterate maid and Jeanne the nosy postal clerk] What a pair: one can't read at all, and the other reads our mail.

  • Man at Melinda's birthday party: Speaking of quotes, I have one that's less famous, but quite troubling. "There are aspects of good people I find loathsome, least of all the evil within them."

    Woman at Melinda's birthday party: My God... Who said that?

    Georges Lelievre: Nietzsche.