Isn't it bad to use the scene of the two policemen falling in love with Ivy's thirteen years of experience, I really can't get why I have to fall in love? The rhythm of the last episode is broken, the turning point is very inexplicable, the front is very delicate, and in the end everything is just fine. I don't like the role of a male police officer. I'm too narcissistic. It's okay to have a little professionalism. Don't build a personal relationship with the victim, try to save her, and become her friend. Your profession requires you to have a conflict of interest with her at some point. , you will betray her trust, and the trust that the victim finally cultivated collapsed, and it was difficult to establish a stable interpersonal relationship. You are hurting her in this way, don't say that you are helping her in order to satisfy your savior complex. At the same time, it is also stupid. Taking her partner into the ICU and forcibly interfering with the little girl who has just been rescued, forcing her to recall traumatic events, is very harmful to children's psychological treatment. The police can be said to be a pile of rubbish, useless, without any substantial contribution, and lost people under the nose of forty plainclothes. No matter how Ivy behaved, an adult man kidnapped and imprisoned a thirteen-year-old girl, it was definitely this man who was at fault. She received such "education" during the formation and development of the cognitive system, and the behavior "correction" based on physical discipline and discipline affected her thinking and cognitive patterns. No matter what she did, the culprit was always the kidnapper. .
The setting of the two police officers is also quite interesting. The male police officers are aggressive and the female police officers are too calm and suspicious. In fact, they are also very realistic. In reality, many female observers and investigators are more inclined to believe that female victims are guilty. I think part of it is that women are in a situation. The patriarchal position is stared at, and it is required to be perfect. When the victim shows a little inconsistency, they subconsciously cut the seat, for fear that she will damage the reputation of the female victim and women, and they will become imperfect, a kind of " She can't represent us women, we're not all like that" fear. At the same time, once female investigators sympathize with female victims, they will be known as being emotional, subjective, and lacking in calm judgment, so sometimes they suppress their subjective emotions too deliberately, which is counterproductive.
Ivy's family and friends are well portrayed, the irreparable helplessness, the subtle and unspeakable sadness, and the indescribable sentimental moments in life are all captured.
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