that he's doing a good job

Aracely 2022-03-21 09:01:19

"When I was young, I asked my priest how you could get to heaven and still protect yourself from all the evil in the world. He told me what God said to his children,' You are sheep among wolves, be wise as serpents, yet innocent as doves. ' "

Then the story unfolds, the disappearance of a girl, the involvement of a detective couple, the ending surprises everyone, and is full of a strong sense of tragedy and a trace of solemnity.

On the one hand, the film satirizes the filthy and smoky social environment, and on the other hand, it poses the dialectical issues of morality and law, justice and morality. The film has no villains. From my point of view, all the characters are tragic. A policeman and the child's uncle used illegal means to protect the child. The last two died, and the two had to spend the rest of their lives in prison. The male protagonist was wandering between morality and law, and finally because of their "criminal" behavior, his girlfriend and The partner left him. No one is right or wrong, the film left us with infinite sadness and helplessness, which produced a strong tear-jerking power.

Detective Remy, played by Ed Harris, says in a conversation with Patrick Kenzie: "Now, this place was a shithole, mind you.

Rats, roaches all over the place. But the kid's room, in the back, was spotless. No, l mean, he swept it, mopped it, it was immaculate .

The little boy's sitting on the bed holding onto his PlayStation or dear life. There's no expression on his face, tears streaming down.

He wants to tell me he just learned his multiplication tables. l mean, the father's got him in this crack den, subsisting on Twinkies and asswhippings, and this little boy just wants someone to tell him that he's doing a good job. "

this dialogue is particularly shocking that I think, if I were the police, I will go to frame the boy's asshole Father. Remy said "kids forgive. Kids don't judge. Kids turn the other cheek." Omg! Kids are so innocent, but why let them grow up in this filthy society and poor family environment!

When Patrick Kenzie sees When it came to the boy's body, he didn't hesitate to kill the child abuser, He's just a kid! God, child abusers don't deserve to live! But Remy died in the end, and his last words before he died were I love kids . He died, with his own perfect fantasy of

children . JACK; How many children have we seen destroyed?

REMY: Enough!

Jack, played by Morgan Freeman, is begging Patrick Kenzie at the last minute to keep the kids with him - We're just trying to give a little girl a life! And when his girlfriend saw the little girl she said, "She's happy. And that'll be okay, because we're gonna know what school she's in, and we're gonna know she's happy, and she's got birthday parties, and she smiles every day, and she has sleepovers." She burst into tears. Everyone, including me, wanted Patrick Kenzie to let them go, but he didn't. The arrival of the police car, heartbroken, the child returned to the mother, but she was not happy, she did not smile when she was with Jack, she could only watch the cartoon silently at home, watching her irresponsible mother go Pick up a new boyfriend, and no one knows what will happen to the child of a prostitute mother.

Finally Patrick Kenzie came to her and pointed to the worn doll in her hand, "ls that Mirabelle (his mother said in the news that she was missing a doll named Mirabelle)?" "Annabelle." the little girl corrected . Continue to play with your doll innocently. Tears flowed (mine) at this point. Look at those innocent children, may God bless you, may you always be happy, always be innocent, stay away from evil, you are so lovely!

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Extended Reading
  • Eliezer 2021-10-21 15:30:23

    The heroine is so fucking like Michael Jackson

  • Marcelina 2022-03-24 09:01:20

    Little Ben’s first directed work, a little bit of surprise

Gone Baby Gone quotes

  • Patrick Kenzie: [upon seeing Amanda's bare room] Kidnapped the furniture, too?

  • Capt. Jack Doyle: You ever investigated an abduction before?

    Patrick Kenzie: I think Mrs. McCready was hoping we could help with the neighborhood aspect of this investigation, the people, you know.

    Capt. Jack Doyle: How old are you?

    Patrick Kenzie: I'm thirty-one.

    Angie Gennaro: He just looks young.

    Capt. Jack Doyle: A four year old child is on the street. It's seventy-six hours and counting. And the prospects for where she might be are beginning to look grim, you understand? Half of all the children in these cases are killed, flat out. If we don't catch the abductor by day one, only about ten percent are ever solved. This is day three. He may look young, but if he wants to work this case, he better not act it.

    Patrick Kenzie: Well, he's been hired by a woman who's the victim of a crime, and by law he's entitled as her representative to be cooperated by the Boston Police Department. So he expects to be.

    Capt. Jack Doyle: And so he will be.