Director and screenwriter Michelle Frank tells the story of a girl's bullying with a fixed-camera long lens in a calm and suffocating picture style. From an observation point of view, let the incident skyrocket until it gets out of control. Without the rendering of the soundtrack, the expressions and movements of the characters in the picture are particularly conspicuous, and the expressive tension of the picture is also improved.
The source of all bullying is actually the loss of control of negative emotions, Camilla’s jealousy, Jose’s shirking, Yale’s cowardice, and Yale’s classmates’ conformity, so this bullying grows out of control until it is out of control. As it should be, Yalei's father's absent-minded concern for his daughter prevented Yalei, who had just lost her mother, not replenishing her father's love in time, making her even more helpless and hesitating. Ya Lei’s father pinned the pain of losing his wife to work, but he did not expect that her daughter was going through a youthful purgatory.
The last father’s approach is also an extension of anti-social violence, but who can understand that his humanity has long been crushed into foam by the pain of bereavement and the pain of bereavement, so he chose revenge, a kind of helplessness and sorrow way of doing.
There is a line in the movie "Scorching Heart" that says: Man is the sum of animality and divinity. He is as good as you can't imagine, and there is no evil. There is no right or wrong. This is human.
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