After all, it wasn't 30 years ago. Sally Field's role as a female strike leader won an Oscar directly. There is no suspense.
In the present era, what the imperialist workers hate is not the capitalists, but China's cheap labor, and the hateful globalization.
Looking at it, I immediately understood that Lin Yihua has somehow transmigrated to Mick Biography. Anyway, I have transmigrated.
While the subject here is not gay rights but women demanding equal pay for equal work, the core is the same, fairness.
The director has filmed very successful films "Saving Grace" and "Calendar Girl" that reflect blue-collar women, and he is good at this theme.
But unlike in the past, he did not focus all on the heroine, but faithfully started from the event itself. Every character has a role. No matter how many roles, everyone is real and believable, with flesh and blood.
Although the tone is not bitter and bitter, but incite one by one. Although they are all small details, they are not overpowering at all, but all of them are my point.
For example, the strike supporter played by bob hoskins talks about the influence of his mother; for example, a female worker who dreams of stardom resolutely uses her body as a weapon to write equal pay after being bought by the factory; for example, the wife of the top management of the factory, a highly educated woman is helpless Being a housewife at home, rushed to the female worker's house to pay tribute. Every point is very moving.
But the most touching moment should be the moment that all audiences agree with, when the heroine's husband finally got into a "demonstration" because of his wife's strike:
I am a good husband, I don't drink too much, don't play with women, I don't beat my wife and children. . . . . .
The words are not over, the heroine scolded,
yes! If you don't drink alcohol, don't play with women, don't gamble, don't beat your wife and children,
do you think you're a saint?
Please, this is what you fucking should have done! ! !
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