What's right and what's wrong - Feelings of "Missing Baby"

Ed 2022-04-22 07:01:04

What type of "Missing Baby" is, I am not a professional film critic and do not want to discuss it. Talking about a drug addict who lost her 4-year-old daughter, who was as sweet as an angel, the police and private investigators searched together, and disturbed the N perverted criminal gangs. While trying to guess which gang of villains kidnapped the girl, the focus suddenly shifts to a gang of cops, and they start to wonder if the bad cops did it. The ending subverted my overly conventional imagination. It turned out to be the girl's uncle or some relative I forgot. He colluded with an old police officer who had lost his 12-year-old daughter, and joined another police officer to rescue the little girl in the form of kidnapping. Hope Give her a better life than living a predictably bad life around that irresponsible mother. But the private detective actor who found out about this matter thinks that the girl should live her own life, and that no matter whether her mother really gets better or not, she wants her daughter to stay by her mother's side. Take it to court and return the girl to her mother. The ending is that the mother still ignores the fooling around, and the male protagonist may keep asking the question of right or wrong for a lifetime.

I think everyone who has seen this film will be busy evaluating it. How to do it best is a question of values. Of course, I also have my own ideas. I think everything should be based on the law. No one can deprive a girl of the right to go home because 90% of people think that a girl is more likely to have a beautiful and normal life by the side of the old police officer. It's legal, but it's actually not unreasonable. It's just a good deed that people think they are right, but it is even more insistent. But my evaluation itself is also a kind of arrogance. As an adult's arrogance, why should we judge, why should we make choices, we always make too many decisions for others for our children, under the banner of being good for them, it is really shameless.

Whether a movie is good or not, there must be something left, or innovation, or thinking, or an atmosphere or a feeling, even if there is a sentence that resonates, it is worth it. What should I do? It's perfect. It's hard to find, I really want to find a movie that I really like!

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Extended Reading

Gone Baby Gone quotes

  • Patrick Kenzie: [upon seeing Amanda's bare room] Kidnapped the furniture, too?

  • Capt. Jack Doyle: You ever investigated an abduction before?

    Patrick Kenzie: I think Mrs. McCready was hoping we could help with the neighborhood aspect of this investigation, the people, you know.

    Capt. Jack Doyle: How old are you?

    Patrick Kenzie: I'm thirty-one.

    Angie Gennaro: He just looks young.

    Capt. Jack Doyle: A four year old child is on the street. It's seventy-six hours and counting. And the prospects for where she might be are beginning to look grim, you understand? Half of all the children in these cases are killed, flat out. If we don't catch the abductor by day one, only about ten percent are ever solved. This is day three. He may look young, but if he wants to work this case, he better not act it.

    Patrick Kenzie: Well, he's been hired by a woman who's the victim of a crime, and by law he's entitled as her representative to be cooperated by the Boston Police Department. So he expects to be.

    Capt. Jack Doyle: And so he will be.