The person who said this was Mike, Skunt's nanny's ex-boyfriend and Skunt's teacher, who is also in the film The second man after Rick to be beaten by Mr Oswald. The story goes like this: The Oswald family teamed up with the boss to engage in school bullying and beat Skunt bloody. Mike, who happened to pass by, saved Skunt.
Then, the second child of Oswald's family messed with the boy and got pregnant. When pressed by his father, he said that the child was Mike's. On the one hand, he lied and on the other hand, he took the opportunity to take revenge. As a result, Mr. Oswald rushed to the school and beat Mike, all the kids in the class were stunned, only Skunt rushed to stop Mr. Oswald (by the way, this actor seems to be the one who had sex with pigs in black mirror s1e1.) Force the Prime Minister to lose weight).
Mike's remarks and his identity also make a lot of sense to me. One is the transition from playmate to teacher. Although his relationship with Skunt has always been good, he demands that Skunt must call him Mr. XX in school. He also told Skunt that if you went to school I would hate you because teachers make students the enemy - a satire on schooling and adult society?
The other one is the so-called "embarrissing shits", does it really just mean that Skunt sees him being beaten up or broken up (the nanny tells Mike that she's getting on with Skunt's dad, and Skunt hears it)? I don't think so - he is a people's teacher, he is representing all the wretched adults, and expressing the most painful apology to the innocent children!
Skunt in the movie asks a lot of questions: Why did the police take Rick away when Mr. Oswald hit Rick? Why did the brother fall in love with the Oswald dick who framed Rick for raping (and she saw the two having sex in the ruins of what was supposed to be the brother and sister's secret base)? Why do men and women do that kind of thing? Why do freshmen have to be bullied after entering school? Why didn't Dad tell him that he was getting on with the babysitter? Etc., etc.
She can understand that she has diabetes and needs blood tests every day, she can understand that Rick is abnormal, and she can barely understand her brother's love for bad girls, but there are more things she can't understand, such as sex, such as violence, such as deceit, such as betrayal.
It's really confusing when watching a movie. Afraid that Skunt will suddenly fall and become dirty. It is gratifying that the director is not so cruel, Skunt is a particularly positive child from beginning to end. (Here, the little actors are praised. They don’t look pretty at first glance, but the more they look, the more flavorful they are, and their acting skills are natural. I hope to become a big actor and a star in the future.)
Suddenly I thought of Luqiu Luwei’s comment on Chai Jing (although Luqiu himself did not admit it), saying that if A reporter who only cares about the people in the news and does not seek the reasons behind the news events is incompetent. Although I don't like Miss Chai, I still think this is debatable. On the surface, Chai Jing's interview is superfluous (the word should not be used like this), but after she interviews everyone, you will find that the reason for the incident is revealed. It's not all about who is immoral or who is unqualified, maybe it's because we don't have a mutual monitoring, interlocking mechanism to detect and avoid similar incidents.
The reason why I thought of such a seemingly unrelated thing is that, when I watched this film, I thought it was a happy family film at first, then I thought it was a growth documentary, and then I thought it was a social problem film. It's especially like a movie adapted from a very bloody but sad social news. The original title is probably a bosom friend like "Why Did the Flower Girl Fall".
It does not seem to have a clear central idea (many aspects of human nature? Parallel time and space? Butterfly effect? Growing up is difficult? Life is not easy?), nor does it have a clear judgment of right and wrong (take the seemingly worst Mr. Oswald, he is An impulsive and irritable man, but he never remarried for the sake of his daughter; he indirectly caused Rick's disorder, and he was also Skunt's savior). This movie is to present the events of a period of time separately and alternately from each person's perspective. As for how you understand it, it is up to you.
After Skunt fell into a coma, the director showed her recovery from the dead in the form of a dream. (By the way, I only know that foreigners’ weddings are held in churches, but what about funerals? At the beginning of the dream, I saw Skunt standing on the stage, and there were rows of neighbors, relatives and friends sitting below. The proof is not a farewell ceremony, but a rebirth from ashes.
In fact, there are similar hints in the middle of the film. Mike is telling a novel to the students, and the students are chatting and asking "is the protagonist dead?" "I don't want him to die" or something. At this time, Mike Seeing that something was wrong with Skunt, he told the ending of the protagonist in a flash: No, he is not dead.)
Throughout the film, there are two obvious references to dreams. One is Skunt begging his father to tell about a dream he had when Skunt was about to be born, and the other is the paragraph above. In retrospect, though, the film is full of flashbacks (and such tricks that I don't know the terminology for), which makes the film feel like a sleeper as a whole.
Skunt's dad described his dream this way: I dreamed of a woman who was sad sometimes but happy most of the time. She is gorgeous.
At the beginning of the film, there is a scene where the baby is crying in the incubator. The father's hand goes in and touches the baby's head, and the baby stops crying. Discovery: Turns out the director told us from the start that Skunt was a special kid. And in the end, not only when Skunt was young, but also when she grew up, she was like the dream of her father, who had gray hair. Maybe it's a dream, maybe it's a follow-up.
We grew up without a hitch, which is already great in itself.
I hope all of us don't become the kind of adults we hate.
"She is a terrific kid. You know, on someday she's gonna blow us all away."
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