Everyone is a murderer

Idella 2022-10-05 03:42:36

Recently I watched two American dramas, "Little Lie" and "Thirteen Reasons". These two stories have one thing in common-the seemingly peaceful daily life covers the turbulent undercurrents. Gentle daylight, verdant grass, pedestrians walking in twos and threes on the side of the road, occasional voices of welcoming greetings, housewives and children full of smiles, men are polite and polite--all they look like are a perfect little girl who is happy and happy. Town, everyone wants to live in such a warm town. However, in such an ideal town, the occurrence of two deaths from time to time makes you swing back and forth in the trance of beautiful imagination and fear.
The story of "Thirteen Reasons" has a very attractive introduction: After the high school girl hannah committed suicide, she sent a cassette to her friends. Each cassette was about a person, and hannah told it in turn. What role did they play in their suicide? Following Hannah's narration, the fig leaves of these people were torn off one by one.
Hannah is a simple and kind high school girl. Adolescent children are easily lonely. So after her best friend suddenly moved and left, Hannah was eager to find the next best friend, so she made friends with her ex-boyfriend Justin and the beautiful cheerleader jessica. , The handsome alex, the sincere-looking courtney and others. Hannah is a relatively simple girl who is very sincere to every friend she makes, without a trace of defense, so her life is naturally turned upside down by these so-called friends. In the entire incident that led to hannaH’s suicide, looking at each individual’s actions alone, it seems that the crimes are not unforgivable. Jessica is just a bitch and fake, and she only cares about herself in her heart; Justin is a pure swinger , A thinking animal in the lower body; courtney is timid and good at camouflage; zack is fragile and extreme. It seems that the real villain is only the dude, but if only the dude does evil alone, will hannah be crushed so thoroughly?
Adolescence is the most important stage in life, because physical and psychological changes cause a double torture on people, improper reconciliation, and it is easy to go to psychological extremes. As a result, hannah's tragedy happened very naturally under the multiple factors of "friends" fueling the flames, the disregard of the people, and the failure of his own mediation. This makes one wonder, who is to blame for this tragedy? Blame those unreliable friends? ——Each of them has no major fault; blame everyone's indifference? ——Everyone is not familiar; blame hannah herself? ——She has indeed suffered countless hot and cold violence. As a result, there is no one who can really blame, so everyone is innocent? Of course not, it is precisely because there is no exact source of evil that makes this thing even more terrifying.
Many people think that a person who has violated the law can be regarded as evil. For example, if a person is a wicked person, most people will reach a consensus that he is a wicked person, otherwise a consensus cannot be reached. However, there are many evils in life that cannot be measured by the law, because when viewed individually, each evil is so unimportant, or even worth mentioning, that many people will feel that waving a hand will pass, not at all. It's a matter, but when these trivial things are added up, these small evils will burst out with powerful force instantly, so strong that no one stabs a knife at all, but the victim is already riddled with blood and blood.
We are accustomed to school violence. It happens all the time, in every corner of the school and outside of school. Some people will say that I have seen/experienced school violence. ? Yeah, you survived, so this is not a thing anymore? Hannah didn't survive, so she deserved it? When we were young, we knew that we shouldn't take evil for small things, and don't take good things away from this old saying, and the meaning of this sentence is also said, but very few people really do it. In the process of watching "Thirteen Reasons", I can often see barrage saying that Hannah did it himself. In many comments, many people rightly accused Hannah as the drama queen and said that whoever met her was unlucky. It’s also when you see these unpleasant remarks on hannah standing on a moral high ground that you can truly appreciate the horror of school violence—whether these people are former perpetrators, former victims, or Passers-by, they all stand in the position of the perpetrator, and speak ill of the victim. Even if the picture they are seeing is bloody, they can't arouse their sympathy for the victim and indignation towards the perpetrator.
The existence of "Thirteen Reasons" may have far surpassed the meaning of a TV drama-in the drama, through the interweaving of two time clues, it shows the process of a fragile and simple girl being crushed by campus violence; and Outside of the drama series, the cold words of the audience from all walks of life show the terrible aspects of this global problem to the fullest. Hannah's death is a mirror. The scenes of the campus are shown in the play, and all kinds of ghosts and zombies are shown outside the play.
Hannah’s tragedy is not the fault of one person or one thing, but the fault of everyone and everything-her classmates, her friends, her teachers, her parents, everything she meets No one was directly related to her death, but everyone pushed her out unconsciously, and finally hannah chose to pick up the knife by herself to end the pain. The cowardice and cowardice of the male protagonist Clay are one of the important reasons for hannah's suicide. However, as he understands the matter deeply, the cowardly Clay bravely tries to set things right, because he finally knows that there are 13 reasons for hannah's suicide. , But there are more reasons to prevent this tragedy from happening, but no one offers a helping hand, even if only once.
"Thirteen Reasons" is not just about why hannah committed suicide. It also tells the audience how the worldwide problem of school violence is caused. Children, adults, audiences, you and me, we Both intentionally or unintentionally promote the occurrence of these school violence, and these are definitely not a trivial matter. If watching the tragedy of hannah can't make you reflect, on the contrary, it makes you show off your own strength from the top down, that is the best explanation for why school violence is so strong.
The end of the show is open and does not tell the audience whether Hannah's parents' lawsuit has been won. In reality, it is impractical to win a case like this, and it is too cruel to lose. What the audience needs to know is that even after the tragedy, there are very few people who are related to it, such as sheri, alex, clay, and more people are still indifferently using lies to justify themselves. Disassociate yourself, such as courtney, jessica, the black teacher. "Thirteen Reasons" is not only about the horror of school violence, but also about the evil of people's hearts.

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Extended Reading

13 Reasons Why quotes

  • Hannah: I'm glad you're still listening. Having fun?

  • [repeated line]

    Hannah: Hey, Helmet.