every day

Dusty 2022-10-01 23:01:26

Another name for this movie is: Spirituality. It is also a more puzzling word that seems to be incomprehensible and specious. Or the "sixth sense" is easier to understand. It mainly tells the story of an 8- or 9-year-old boy and a child psychologist who can see ghosts (all ghosts are wraiths) and communicate with them. The movie appears to be satirizing the doctor at first. The child psychologist had actually encountered such a small patient before, but he did not believe that anyone could see ghosts. Instead, he believed that the patient suffered from moving image paranoia, so he gave him injections and medicines. tragedy. This time, the doctor learned a lesson, listened to the client's voice, considered the problem from his point of view, and found evidence that the client did have psychic abilities, and finally helped the client and himself. Many sexual minorities are tortured to commit suicide or go crazy because of this, but in fact, they are precisely the people whose communication skills are extraordinary and can even bring new meaning to human beings. Differences should not be the basis for ranking, but should be seen as a source of wealth. The doctor-patient relationship, like the teacher-student relationship, is essentially a power relationship. Second, it seems to be satirizing religion. God doesn't really work in a lot of horror movies, and it doesn't work at all in this one. Little boys often go to church to seek refuge, but ghosts can still enter the church, and psychologists also point out that it is useless to go to church to escape pain. Every time a child goes to church, he steals a small icon and brings it home. His little world has actually become a private prayer room with many statues, but idolatry does nothing to stop the ghost. Later, he decided to seek help from a psychologist, who told him that listening to and communicating with ghosts was the right way. He also successfully helped some ghosts realize their unfulfilled wishes in the world, so that these ghosts could rest in peace forever. Near the end of the film, the little boy plays King Arthur who draws the sword in the stone in the stage play, and wields the sword proudly, which also means that he finally begins to believe and use his own power. Sure enough, there has never been a savior, everything depends on us. Who created the human world? It's us working people. In the end, it seems to tell people to communicate, communicate and praise well while alive, so as not to be a ghost after death. The little boy came from a single-parent family, and his mother didn't believe that his son could see ghosts, so the child had to tell her: "grandmother came to see me and told me that she actually went to your dance performance back then, although you always thought she didn't. Go. You once asked her a question at the grave, were you proud of me? Grandma said her answer was 'every day'." Then mother and son embraced And crying, the mother finally understands the son, and will not repeat the mistakes of his mother again. This scene was so moving that almost all the audience were crying when they saw it. "Every day" not only represents the telling of countless dead people, but also reminds the living how people should live. And almost all the resentful spirits in the film need to listen and talk the most, so that they can get real rest and convey meanings and requests to the living. It's really weird!

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Extended Reading

The Sixth Sense quotes

  • Malcolm Crowe: Keep moving, cheese dick.

  • Cole Sear: I'm ready to communicate with you now.