I don't know when I didn't like watching teen movies, but for the powerful performance of Ellen Page's evil childish face and explosive small body. This film seems to have more form than content, and the split lens is incompetent in order to highlight the theme of this fragmented life; if it reverses life, would you really shoot it backwards? Alternative shooting methods are talked about, but they are not of great significance. It's all about Ellen Page.
Adolescence is dangerous, and the slightest attitude of parents can be like a stone thrown into a lake, causing a huge uproar. Sometimes people always strongly condemn parents' indifference to children or improper education for causing children's psychological deformities. They do not oppose the butterfly effect of family education, but they do look at the individual's own antibodies and psychology. Adolescence is dangerous, and when you start to understand that this society is reaching out to this group of people, that's dangerous. Everyone can be a friend and teacher, and everyone can be an enemy villain. The dangers of adolescence are self-imposed exile and fantasies that do not know what to desire and think that they do not feel desire.
Many adults are reluctant to understand children. Yes, indeed, in the eyes of adults, the ideas of those children are indeed naive and ridiculous and asking for trouble. It is easy for people to forget that they have grown up like that, and that they were once a troublemaker who took themselves seriously. A daughter-in-law who has become a mother-in-law either forgets the years of being a daughter-in-law, or remembers the years of being a daughter-in-law too much, and it is very easy to get the past back—from an irrelevant person.
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