How should I put it, the deepest point this movie gave me is the joys, sorrows and sorrows of marginalized people. No matter what they are in the eyes of the world, they themselves know to respect themselves and the people they love. The most sadness in the film makes people feel the maliciousness of the world, but the relationship between Cindy and Alexander Ann is reassuring. I will be very angry if someone takes my things, but if it is you, I will feel sad and want to give up, but you have to know that I love you no matter what. If you are hurt, I will accompany you. If you lose your hairpiece, you are afraid of being ugly. I will give you mine. You know, I hope you are better than me in everything. What happened to the white girl in the end is distressing. No one is more noble than anyone else, and no one has the right to laugh at others. Ya's insistence on music is also embarrassing. In the end, the lines in this movie are all very good, and the one that impressed me the most was actually a sentence by the passer-by driver Carlo, "Even if he doesn't respect himself, let him know that he has to respect his family." And now it's actually exam week, I put a bunch of books and didn't review, and I'm going to blow up when I read this. . . .
View more about Tangerine reviews