never forgive

Alphonso 2022-03-01 08:01:19

Fast-forward about 30 minutes of a 120-minute movie. It looked very depressing.

I'm a father, and I'll take the dog euthanasia drug to kill that damn black family.

Even after looking for a lot of relevant information and analysis, I still can't understand that my daughter's so-called leaving is a shame, and I accept that "there is no way to have no weapons, no land, no property and no dignity". Grass, take half of the land as a reward to take revenge, otherwise you will have everything. If being gang-raped in South Africa is a trivial matter, such as losing 10 yuan, then I have to let you lose 100 yuan every day, and find someone to gang (sodo) a black family every day - including the child who participated in the gang-rape of course.

The father's seduction (I didn't watch the movie carefully and then checked the data and said it was) a schoolgirl cannot make the gang rape of a black daughter a just act.

Differences in the body structure of ethnic groups lead to differences in thinking not racism but facts, just like the differences in thinking between men and women. Diet and climate can change behavior patterns, not to mention body structure. There are historical reasons for the violence of blacks in South Africa. What are the reasons for the most black foreign criminals in Guangzhou? Descendants of Kunlun slaves to take revenge?

Hurricane Rescue Rage Rescue Ransom Storm must be seen again to soothe the mood, tit-for-tat never forgive.

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Extended Reading
  • Torrey 2022-04-21 09:03:33

    Coetzee's Nobel Prize-winning novel "Shame" penetrates deeply into the soul of modern South Africa. Director Steve Jacob's adaptation has rational restraint in dealing with complex social issues, creating a sensitive and profound novel. The film work should not disappoint the many readers of the original novel. - Film critic Allan Hunter

  • Khalil 2022-04-24 07:01:24

    The presumptuous warmth of a civilized society.

Disgrace quotes

  • [first lines]

    Professor David Lurie: I haven't heard from my daughter.

    Soraya: Still living with a woman.

    Professor David Lurie: Yes, still a lesbian. Still on the farm. She thinks it's safe there.

    Soraya: No where's safe. Too many people with nothing to do but cause trouble. How's work?

    Professor David Lurie: They look through me when I speak. Forget my name.

    Soraya: There's no respect anymore. Have you missed me?

    Professor David Lurie: I miss you all the time.

  • Professor David Lurie: A woman's beauty does not belong to her alone, it's part of the bounty she brings into the world. She has a duty to share it.

    Melanie Isaacs: What if I already shared?

    Professor David Lurie: Then you should share it more widely.