The story of the Australian film "Baby Teeth" is not compact, but it is heavy. In the face of the misfortune of fate, middle-class families are even more vulnerable, and only have helplessness and concessions. Without the toughness and arrogance of big political and economic families, and without the numbness and fearlessness of poor families, the middle-class is more child-centered, more consciously safeguarding social morality and ethics, and more pursuing the quality and stability of life. The survival logic and principle of the middle-class family in the movie was broken by the daughter's misfortune. Too much elite education, too many constraints and rules, before the daughter reaches the end of her life, she suddenly feels that she doesn't indulge herself, she doesn't taste the taste of being a bad child, and she may feel ashamed of her life. Parents who are under tremendous mental pressure can't bear to insist and refuse, knowing that doing so will make their daughter's situation worse, and can only endure what her daughter does, and even develop it to bribe her in private. The film talks about middle-class families, but it definitely does not advocate class differentiation. On the contrary, there is too much elite education, too much elegant music, and sometimes try the party of scumbags and scumbags, and I really feel very grounded. It's not love, but for a short life, it can be considered thrilling. The values, life pursuits and survival principles of the middle class are a web woven, a web that is not tight and firm. The middle class is the cornerstone of the country and society. It is for economic and social stability. As an individual middle class, they are actually too fragile.
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