A true autobiographical novel adaptation. I haven't read the original book, and I haven't specifically researched the real events. But as far as the movie is concerned, it is really a good movie! very good!
Very positive view! ! ! The main line is simple and clear, which is the Indian live-action story of a little tadpole looking for his mother. The male protagonist was forced to get lost and adopted by Australian "parents". With his biological mother in his heart, the male protagonist of the original family is caught in the story of finding a home and unable to extricate himself, and finally finds his mother.
In today's society, there is a great need for such a positive three-view film. This kind of coercion of the male protagonist is now a dream that many people dream of, and even willing to spend money to realize it. This kind of yearning for life adopted by a wealthy family has become a pursuit. Even many people, in the family, want to "lost" themselves, to abandon their original family - poor, unbearable, parents who are looked down upon by themselves or others.
In the film, the male protagonist said when arguing with his girlfriend: Every day I think of my mother and my brother looking for me everywhere. Can you understand that feeling? And we are now so wealthy and leisurely, I feel sad... (not the original words, to the effect)
What a right view! ! ! !
And how many of us now want to live a rich life like the male protagonist, but despise it, and even don't want to have such poor parents, unbearable families, and humble origins. Afraid of being pointed out and ridiculed...
How sad! ! ! What a deformity! ! Sick! !
Fortunately, there is this movie, there is such a story, and there are such real characters.
If you interpret the movie a little more (not related to the theme of the movie):
Adoption and adoption, who exactly is satisfied? The Australian mother said: I am not infertile, we do not want to have children, the world has too many people, and having one more may not make the world a better place, but adopting one (like you, born in a poor country, poor children) can have the opportunity to integrate them into the world...of course why is it an Indian child, because it has something to do with her childhood...
The values displayed here are very Western, very certain classes. "They" are interested in spirituality, while "we" are interested in wealth...
Survival - life - abundance - cultivation - spirit! ! The immutable laws of society! !
This also involves the adoption of a small number of developed capitalist countries behind the adoption, while the adopted countries are developing or backward countries such as the Third World.
Personal adoption behavior: I want to educate you, change you... Putting it at the national level is the colonizer's rule over the colonized countries, reform, education...
Among the second and third generations of the colonized aborigines in Seediq Bale, some received the colonizer's reform education and so on...
On one side is a primitive wild man who beats and beheads - this is my root, my parents, where I live and raise me.
On the other hand, civilization is advanced, open and free - the social change and development brought about by the colonists.
They are contradicting and confused... But at least they are still confused and contradicting... And in reality, how many second- and third-generation transferees have long forgotten their roots. After all, from birth to growth, they are in another land. How can they make them love a place they have never seen, never visited, or even known about? Bloodline? Flowing blood?
So do we all have to look to the African continent?
So are we Han people going to stop worshipping the overwhelming Qing costume dramas - that's the Manchus - the nation that rules our Han people! ! !
The male protagonist was lucky to find the land where he was born, and he was extremely lucky to find that home and his mother! !
And what about "we"...? ...
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