After watching the first episode, I thought it was one episode, one case, and I was still wondering if this ending was too embarrassing. Didn't expect the whole one to start with the first victim.
In the process of watching it, I kept thinking: what kind of attitude is the correct attitude after experiencing this? Why should Mary suffer from other people's attitudes because of her previous life experiences and attitudes that make people feel different? (Actually, the thing that chills me the most is not the endless retelling of the policeman, but the fact that her former parenting mother, as a person who "experienced" such a thing, couldn't empathize with Mary's time. The way I used during the filming also made people feel very real, because as a viewer, if I didn’t insist on “why lie about this kind of thing” and a series of similar rape cases I saw later, I would also Will be confused by such a lens... Before discussing everyone's attitude, I should probably think about why I have this idea? Is this system of integrity that we have established to "keep no one innocent from being wronged" or "to keep no one bad from getting away"?
The so-called "suspected crime never existed" I could not see from the police officer's attitude. (And later, even after knowing the truth, his slightly old police officer did not apologize~)
It not only portrays several victims: like Mary, after being hurt as if nothing had happened, she who wanted the sheet at that time...even secretly rejoiced that this matter received attention. There are also those who exhausted what they had learned after being hurt, wrote down all the details, and looked calm, self-controlled, and smart. She knew what was the most correct way, and she didn't want her boyfriend to get angry because he knew about it, and she didn't want to bother her friends. There is also a woman who seems too sensitive and irritable and too careful about herself, but in fact she can't sleep every night. There is also a "grandmother" who works in a youth education center. In her dreams, she repeatedly asks, "Why me? Did I do something wrong? What did I do to attract the attention of the perpetrator?" "The differences and connections between the victims are completely displayed in front of us, and the most irritating thing is that" the criminals still said that their first case was not perfect when they were finally arrested. All the evidence could get him to jail, but he was not arrested, which made him even more reckless.” (Actually, I had an inexplicable revenge mentality at this time, if the first case was Mary’s case, this would be It's all the fault of their poor investigation! It's all the fault of the unreasonable cops, but I can't seem to think so)
I suddenly remembered this sentence: In art, tragedies realized by accidents, car accidents, and accidents are not good tragedies. A really good tragedy is when everything is logical, everyone is normal, even kind, and things still slowly and irrevocably slide toward rout, with no winners, no survivors.
I'm not saying that the officer was a good guy, but have to deny that while he's impatient and he doesn't have enough empathy, they're not as good as the two female officers are, but that doesn't mean he's the first downright bad guy. That's probably what the whole show is trying to convey for us "we can do better, not 'good' with holes like that but really empathetic, putting ourselves in our shoes"
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