I remember a mother's day in high school, the teacher showed us a movie about mother's love, to the effect that the child's mother died of a terminal illness at the beginning, then the mother loved her desperately, and finally the mother died, the little girl learned to be independent and face the wind and rain . I don't know what the teacher meant, but showing such an unlucky movie to us before Mother's Day makes my heart ache. Of course, this story is still quite touching after the terminal illness is removed, but it does not necessarily have to be the mother who is dying to learn to be independent. Anyway, most people's families should not be standard with a dying mother (bah, bah, I love you, mother).
Therefore, instead, I like the mother played by Maggie Smith in "Keeping Silence" who easily dismembered her husband and his lover and cleared the obstacles in her daughter's life after she was released from prison. Maternal love is just as convenient for her as killing a few people. It sounds bloody and cruel to say that, but the British humor takes everything for granted. When the police asked Grace why she wanted to kill her husband and her husband's lover, she replied: "I can't just watch them run away and do nothing." Seeing this, I couldn't help laughing out loud, as if killing people was a matter of course, doing things for heaven. Yes, stealing fish is really going to be beheaded. At most, we just talk about it. Grace in the play did it. Even after being imprisoned for decades, he still goes his own way. Anyone who stands in the way will be killed. Kill kill, kill all those who hinder the daughter's happiness. In this way, several people disappeared inexplicably in the small town, and the daughter's family became more and more prosperous, harmonious and beautiful.
A mother's love is so domineering that it doesn't need logic, as long as her daughter can be happy. Although it is impossible to have a mother with a hammer standing by our side all the time, and seeing a bad guy, he will hammer him to death with a hammer, but they use their own way to help us "hammer" those big bad guys, maybe they didn't understand and Angry, but looking back, I still have to thank Mom for the hammer. Just like at the end of the film, the mother left her daughter and started her own life, and the daughter also wrote to tell her that she missed her very much and faced the next life with confidence. When the staff of the water conservancy bureau asked to drain the pond with the dead body underneath, she solved the problem with the method taught by her mother, and it was easy to deal with all kinds of troubles.
You see, it’s also about growing up. The first part had to curse the mother with a terminal illness to make the little girl grow up, but the British don’t use those tear gas bombs to explain mother’s love, but tell you that even a “killer maniac” has three pounds. Domineering motherly love.
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