Maybe I have some feminist thinking, but I am not persistent or impulsive. I am recently reading a book "I Don't Want You to Die for Nothing", which talks about the germination of women's independence in Afghanistan and the advocacy for women's independence, and her two women's independence. The encouragement and teaching of the film, which overlap with the theme of this film, are the persecution, humiliation and destruction of women by the patriarchal society in the Middle East. Women are bought and sold like goods, polygamy has caused many women to suffer, and domestic violence is everywhere. It can be seen that the saddest thing is that women think that this is fate, or that this is the expression of their husband's love for them. People who have never been to a Middle East country and have not experienced the local culture in person are indeed difficult to understand and accept. The story of a woman with a different fate but the same destination tells us that India has awakened to women's rights and has risen among the few. I think some sensitive scenes and plots in the film must not pass the trial in China. I don't know when there are many in China. Everything is controlled completely, no film has the right to express free will, India is indeed better than China
View more about Parched reviews