Whether it's stereotyped or clichéd, I'm giving it 4 stars because it tells a story that we haven't told. Especially in the past few years, our big screen has become more and more monotonous, more and more tall, and more and more detached from our actual life. More worth 4 stars. There are nearly 90 million disabled people in our country, but there is still no decent film and television work to tell the real life of this huge group. And we rarely see them on the road. Are they consciously unwilling to cause trouble to society? Or are we simply not giving them a tolerant environment? We don't even understand how they live, how do you give them a suitable environment? Many years ago I saw a man on a train. He always twitched his head to the side and made weird noises. I thought he was sick, and he was crazy, so I was on guard. Later, because I never saw such a person again, I slowly forgot about it. Now when I see a movie like this, I remember it. I know that this is not a neurosis, it will not cause essential damage to a person's IQ and emotional intelligence, and he will not be dangerous to us, but it depends on how we treat him. I remember the movie "Joker", the protagonist also had Tourette's syndrome, he would laugh uncontrollably and terrify a mother on the bus. The Joker lives in an environment full of incomprehension and hostility, so he becomes a spoiler. And Naina, she became a double doctor of science, and later became an excellent teacher, because he met his mother, brother and headmaster Khan, their support, understanding became the driving force for her growth, plus her own unyielding efforts. From her experience of interviewing 18 schools in a row for five years, it can be seen that she is a strong person. We actually don't know if it was the effects of Tourette's as a child that made her strong, or whether it was because she was strong that she was able to overcome the effects of Tourette's.
The good thing about this movie is that we'll unwittingly forget about Naina's Tourette's jerks and screams, just as we'd become more tolerant and understanding if we knew and were familiar enough. It looks like a movie like this is about the lives of a small group of people, but in fact it's still about how we all treat ourselves, others, and life. Only if we ourselves can get to know and understand other people, the relationship between people will become more harmonious. So why should we look down on such films?
I often see such a sentence under the comments of Korean movies: Koreans dare to shoot if they dare to shoot, but what should they do after they are done? Not to mention the furnace method. In this way of expression alone, there is a sense of superiority. It seems that our inability to photograph anything has become an advantage, and it seems that our society is getting better and better just when we sit still and don’t express ourselves.
Finally, why is this society getting better and better? alms?
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