The final dialogue and narration of father and daughter

Braulio 2022-03-24 09:01:40

The dialogue between the father and daughter in the car at the end of the movie, as well as the narration, can replace many movie reviews.

grace: what you don't like about me
daddy: it's a word you use that annoys me. You say I'm arrogant
grace: plundering the rights given by God, that's arrogance
daddy: that's exactly what I don't like about you, the real arrogance is you
grace: you're here to say this?
It's not me doing the trial, it's you,
daddy: you don't want to do the trial because you sympathize with their
poor childhood, a murderer is not necessarily a murderer, right? (a deprived childhood and a homicide) isn't really necessarily a homicide , right?)
You can only blame the environment. In your opinion, rapists and murderers may be victims. However, I call them dogs. If they want to lick their own vomit, they can only stop them
with the whip
forgive them when they are in their nature
grace: yes i am arrogant because i forgive them
daddy: oh my god do you know how insane you are when you say this
you have this prejudice that no one can get you The same high moral level, so you exonerate them. I can't think of anything more arrogant than that,
my dear boy, the excuse you use to forgive others is a grace you'll never use on yourself
: why can't I be kind
daddy: No, you can, if there's time to be merciful. You should maintain your own standards, and you should maintain standards for others. You should be punished for your own mistakes, and others should be punished for their
own mistakes I love you so much, I love you to death, but you are the most arrogant person I have ever met. But you say I'm arrogant grace: I'm arrogant, you are arrogant, you said it, now you can go daddy: My daughter is not with me? grace: no, i don't go daddy: they say you're in trouble here. I'll give you time to think about it, maybe you'll change your mind grace: daddy I won't: listen, power isn't that bad, I'm sure you'll find your own way to use it. Get out there and think about grace: people here do their best in tough circumstances daddy: if you think so. But is it good enough to each do their best? Do they love you? [Father thinks Grace is the most arrogant person. She has always had an overwhelming sense of moral superiority, so she forgives all immoral behaviors of others, and believes that they are doing them out of nature and forced by circumstances. Her father thinks that grace forgives the townspeople because she feels that they will never have the same moral height as her, and that grace will never excuse herself from the guilt under the pretext of being out of nature. This is grace's arrogance. The father's position is that no matter what the circumstances are, what is wrong should be punished, and the nature should be restrained by power. And this is where grace considers the father arrogant. 】















"Grace thought about it for a long time, she knew that if it wasn't shot when the rogue arrived, then she was facing her father's suggestion to go back and be an associate of his gang. She didn't need to think about an answer. Although she It turns out that those rascals and villains are less different from the inhabitants of the small town of Dougwell than she thought.
The fruit bushes in the dark look so fragile, it is reassuring that they will respawn in the spring if you don't abuse them , bears countless fruits in the summer, they are excellent ingredients for pie, especially when cinnamon is added.
Grace looks around at the frightened faces behind the window, they follow her every move, she brings them to be ashamed of fear. After all they were just weak, how could she hate them for that. If she lived in one of the houses, she might have done what they did to her too. As his father said , she measured them by her own measure. Wouldn't she be like Chuck, Vera, Ben, Mrs. Hansen, Tom, and all those who lived in the house?
(The light came out, the town was illuminated, grace Got her answer.)
If she did as they did, she wouldn't be able to justify any of her actions or condemn them. It was as if her pain and grief had finally found their right place, no, they were It's not good enough, if anyone has the power to correct it, he has the responsibility to do so, for the sake of the other towns, for all the human beings, and for grace himself.

[When my father proposed to shoot a dog and hang the body under a lamp to warn the residents, Grace refused, she felt that it would only make them more afraid. Grace believes that the root of the problem of the town residents is the fear of power (fear of the police, fear of the father's gang), the more afraid, the more they will backlash, so once someone shows weakness in front of them, they will start to have a strong mentality, Inflict damage to the weak. 】

Nima is really easy to go around, it's hard to justify it = =. Anyway, Mr. Till's film reflects the weaknesses of human nature's greed, jealousy, hypocrisy, and lust.









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Extended Reading

Dogville quotes

  • Narrator: How could she ever hate them for what was at bottom merely their weakness? She would probably have done things like those that had befallen her if she had lived in one of these houses. To measure them by her own yardstick, as her father put it. Would she not, in all honesty, have done the same as Chuck and Vera and Ben and Mrs Henson and Tom and all these people in their houses? Grace paused and as she did, the clouds scattered and let the moonlight through, and Dogville underwent another of those little changes of light. It was as if the light previously so merciful and faint finally refused to cover up for the town any longer. Suddenly, you could no longer imagine a berry that would appear one day on a gooseberry bush, but only see the thorn that was there right now. The light now penetrated every unevenness and flaw in the buildings and in the people. And all of a sudden, she knew the answer to her question all too well. If she had acted like them, she could not have defended a single one of her actions and could not have condemned them harshly enough. It was as if her sorrow and pain finally assumed their rightful place. No. What they had done was not good enough. And if one had the power to put it to rights, it was one's duty to do so - for the sake of other towns, for the sake of humanity and not least, for the sake of the human being that was Grace herself.

  • Narrator: [as McKay explores even further with his hand] It was not Grace's pride that kept her going during the days when fall came and the trees were losing their leaves, but more of a trance like state that descends on animals whose lives are threatened - a state in which the body reacts mechanically in a low tough gear, without too much painful reflection. Like a patient passively letting his disease hold sway.