Three-and-a-half stars (seeing the follower gave five stars and once again doubted his own aesthetics) has less impact on watching "The Seventh Continent", but the film is indeed more complete in explaining the cause and effect of the whole thing. The whole film is made up of four story lines (which seem to suggest three dead and a criminal), a couple who keep adopting their daughter, a lonely old man who is treated coldly by her daughter, a smuggled boy and a college student. The occurrence of the whole case seems to depend only on the thoughts of college students, and in the so-called developed city, factors such as indifference (daughter to the elderly), violence (husband to wife) and so on seem to imply that the boy heard "your world is better." Well, the people here are all good people." The rosy hope that came about was shattered by the war-torn Middle East and Eastern Europe that was constantly broadcast on the news. And the tragedy of the three people seems to be nothing under the tragedy of the overall war, and is covered up in other reports. (If the sensational approach is lost, it should be inserted into the entertainment event report on Christmas Eve to form a contrast, but the cold Haneke does not.) In the film, Haneke still likes to scare the audience abruptly, such as the boy walking and jumping at the station. Wife's slap. The shooting that takes place at the end is calm and fluid, not lyrical in the slightest. //After reading the film review, we can start with urban mechanization and indifferent thinking, rational restraint and outburst of anger. The daily mechanized life of the wife and husband seems to have lost their affection for each other and can only be maintained by adopting children. Husband slaps wife despite her faith in Christ (just after appearing to show love). The conversation between the old man and his daughter was repeatedly interrupted, and it can be seen that the old man and the daughter were unable to communicate with each other. College students have nothing to do every day and bet with people all day long. Humanity in the city is suppressed and distorted. On Christmas Eve, an inadvertent explosion turned into anger.
View more about 71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance reviews