I watched it yesterday with iQIYI VIP coupons. The label of the movie is crime. I thought it would be like the suspenseful movie "Escape from the Dead" that I watched earlier this year, or "12 Years a Slave".
I think rather than defining the film as a crime, it should be defined as a growth theme. The heroine has a very happy family, her father is burly and strong, who loves her wife, her mother is gentle and understanding, and the family of five is happy. It was very hard. When I was a few years old, I saw my good friend being shot to death, and when I was sixteen, I saw my first love being shot and killed. Not to mention how much damage it caused to a girl's mental health and stress, even a steel man. Can't bear the weight of life. Maybe because of her father's education, the heroine was very cautious, so cautious that when her first best friend was killed, she could not mention the murderer, so when her second friend was killed, she really began to look at it. What did her silence for sixteen years mean, obedience? Is it cowardly?
It is also because of these two conflicts that the heroine's growth process is more shown. But in fact, I was a little confused about the role of father. At the beginning of the film, I saw my father teach the two little children common sense to live in the community (forgot their names), so here I can understand the caution and sensitivity of the heroine when she grows up, But in the later period, when the father's masculine brilliance and the power of fearless sky suddenly burst out, I didn't quite understand how the heroine grew up to become such a fearful girl, and why was she afraid of being recognized by her classmates? I don't dare to speak up for my friends when I come out. Why don't I communicate with my good friends and boyfriends because I'm afraid of being misunderstood by my classmates? Is it just because I forcefully want to express the growth and transformation of the heroine? A little far-fetched. If she was backed by such a strong father since she was a child, then she should be strong and brave.
The film's anti-ethnic discrimination is still very educational. Especially in the film, the students in the school skip class to "protest". In fact, it is clearly for justice, and in private, it is indeed to cheer for not having to go to class. Fortunately, big or small, I believe many people have had it, and I have had a similar experience myself. In fact, it is very disrespectful to the viewers, because we will all stand in the position of the heroine and think about this. This is a problem, but it is taken for granted among students, because when there is nothing close to you, most people are indifferent.
So, don't be silent, protest, use your actions to shine.
This is what the film wants to express.
Hey, the logic is confusing, I don't even know what I'm going to say, someone sees it, and asks for a book list to exercise logical thinking.
View more about The Hate U Give reviews