The daughter was raped and murdered, and the father took revenge. Whether it is the expression of pure emotion or the extension of social topics, it should be an article with great depth, but the film only stops at the entanglement of emotion and law. If you kill your enemy, your daughter won't survive. You avenge your personal revenge, which means that you are as bad as the murderer. These logics are actually nonsense, that is, a law-abiding citizen. Speaking of this, I really think of last year's movie "Law-abiding Citizen". The ministry is a sudden betrayal near the end. Although the film succumbs to public morality and social law, it also makes the protagonist express no regrets for what he has done when he is arrested, which is a noncommittal attitude to a certain attitude, which implicitly shows that lynching has its rationality. Killing for one's life is the most simple concept of right and wrong, but the law does not necessarily follow.
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