cohabitation

Meta 2022-03-01 08:01:32

A comedy that I think is a good film, and I can't help laughing at many points. The film started with the form of broadcasting news, showing us John's prison journey in the first half of his life with the splicing of pictures. It was not very clear to see. With the richness of the plot, it turned out that his revenge was raging. Some stories happened in Yangcuo, which changed the three people and became a family. For many emotions, we don’t have to have a variety of emotions from the beginning. Maybe it’s just that the situation at the time is different, and the immediate feelings we get are different. Just like John's hatred of the judge, it's just that the judge played a decisive role in connecting with the outside world to the prison from a young age, resulting in a subtle feeling that I understand as familiar. As for the judge's son, he was positioned as an enemy at the beginning of the meeting. After getting along with him day and night, he slowly witnessed his change. There was no anger in his heart at all, but instead he became dependent. When a person enters your life, you want to It is a little difficult to remove. So, in the end, even if it doesn't matter so much, I still sit side by side like a family and drive the car and sing...

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Let's Go to Prison quotes

  • John Lyshitski: Our justice system sucks. You know, there are over two million Americans behind bars. That's a little larger than the population of Houston. Every year, there are enough children born in prison to fill 250 Little League teams and enough people are raped in prison to fill a stadium more than three times. Can you picture that? Three stadiums full of people raping each other? I know I can.

  • John Lyshitski: It costs $54 a day to keep a person in prison, which comes out to $75 million a day nationally. That's $28 billion a year. When you think about it, wouldn't it be cheaper just to let us keep your goddamn car stereos?