- Doubt
has really watched a lot of movies lately, all of which he wanted to see before but didn't have time to care about.
"Fighting Club", "Kabluey", "Burn After Reading", and the "Doubt" I just finished watching
each have the urge to code words, but I don't know where to start.
Rather than being apprehensive, it would be better to be apprehensive. I am afraid that what I write will always lag behind my feelings.
I vaguely remember Meryl Steep in the Madison Bridge who had to choose between love and family.
It seems like a world apart, things are different.
Meryl plays the headmaster of an old nun in a Catholic school. To her, everything should be as it is, and
no sign of change should appear in her eyes, which would mean destruction
. So, in such a missionary school, for well-educated children, everything is It should be rigorous and orderly.
There should be no small gestures in class, no touch even on the corner of the nun's clothes, no ballpoint pens, no listening to popular songs, and no sugar when drinking tea.
These are not allowed by the rules, and what is not allowed is wrong.
The arrival of a priest changed everything, and his contagious sermons and charisma subtly affected the inherent state of the church.
He can easily joke with the children, teach them to play basketball, he can write with a ballpoint pen, and he is used to putting sugar in his tea, 3 pieces.
She loves her students and the church, and follows the rules she believes in in a way that borders on paranoid.
This reminds me of my student days, when I was a student with small hands behind my back, with a straight back and a pencil.
In class, we are told what to do and what not to do, and most importantly, they even tell us that what they say is always right, without bias.
When the power overwhelmed the truth, the priest left sadly, leaving behind the thick notepad with the scent of flowers.
But she lost her voice in pain and fell into deep doubt.
So, whose doubt is this, or is it a lose-lose?
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