The process of watching the movie was unpleasant, and it wasn’t because I didn’t understand what the director wanted to express, but I was rather angry. From my point of view, the story was unreasonable in the first place. The dismissal of the heroine and the co-workers could each get a thousand dollars more at the price of She works 3 hours of overtime a week, and 16 people work for a total of 48 hours to compensate for the heroine's labor, so the question is, is this thousand yuan only paid once or every month? If it is only paid once, these workers are too unprofitable. If one thousand yuan will buy them out for 3 hours of overtime per week, won't this account be counted? If you want to pay extra overtime or give an extra bonus of 1,000 yuan every month, then the boss has not saved any money or even lost any money. Instead, he has put himself in a situation where there may be a shortage of manpower at any time. What is the motivation? Taking a step back, the boss did save money and didn't care about the possible outflow of personnel in the future. Then I don't understand, why didn't the heroine directly fire her when she was on leave when she was suffering from depression? It is disgusting to have to let the workers vote to decide whether to hire or fire when they are sick and ready to go back to work.
The second is the husband of the heroine. The introduction said that he is firm support, but he can pull it down. He is obviously not understanding or understanding at all. He keeps pushing his wife to ask for help, and it makes me sick.
The third is the heroine's lobbying. It's too unprofessional. It just says that I need work and money. I want to work with you instead of receiving benefits. I know that a thousand dollars is very important to you. Well, it's unconvincing, at least it's impossible to say, "If one day you are also sick, the boss will vote to dismiss you, don't you want everyone to support you?" Since they are all taking medicine and doing painful lobbying , can't you use your heart and mind? At this time, to be calm and restrained like a robot is more fake than hysterical impassioned.
In the end, being fired is not a big deal. It can't compare to Ken Loach's "I Am Blake", "Sorry, We Missed You", etc. It's really not a big deal to show a kind-hearted woman on the verge of unemployment getting out of her psychological predicament. A sweet and salty film.
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