Another example is skins. In addition to skins, the singular form also means "guy" in slang. Another less common meaning also refers to the layer of paper wrapped in hemp. It's so clear that the title came out, and it is really rare to have such a comprehensive coverage of the meaning of the script.
As for this misfit, the translator was obviously wronged by it. Misfit has the meaning of being out of proportion to society or the surrounding environment. Misfits, according to my understanding, is a group of people who are incompatible with their surroundings.
A group of messy juvenile delinquents acquired various superpowers due to a strange storm, and then the strange things in the whole town were endless. Obviously, their lives could not be described as worse. They had no common sense at all. To destroy one's own life! ……Among them, even if it is manslaughter, hiding the body, full-screen foul language, sex, drug use, and anti-social behavior that can be seen everywhere, any movie can scare the investors. Biao pee, as a movie, I am afraid that the level is not enough!
But the British came out. Channel 4 is also broadcast! At this point, I really admire the ability of the British to play TV shows. At the beginning, I liked skins very much, because it didn’t take youth seriously. A TV series was very careful from the script to the camera. It was filmed like a "novel style". I love it because it really stands. Narrative from the perspective of a teenager, with a fictional style, jumping, intermittent, and not as neat as a TV series. In those days of youth, everything may not be forgiven, but there is no sense of sordidness. [Later the three four seasons will not be discussed, deviated from the original intention, no more novels, completely spread out for the sake of gimmicks, no charm]
Compared with skins, I prefer misfits.
Because it is more real. More generally, there is no outfit, self-deprecating from beginning to end.
Are superpowers real?
In fact, it is just a cruel youth film in the cloak of superpowers. Whether it is superpowers or suspense, it is to tell the story of their despicable, despicable, hopeless lives.
Whether killing or taking drugs, is it common?
In almost all countries and all races, teenagers are more violent, more direct, crazier, purer, and more easily injured than we can think of.
We call that hormonal exuberance.
Because compared to the lives of most of the children in skins, they are obviously lower level, without outfits, and more naked.
Here, there is no Upper East Side of New York, no London Fashion Week, no crazy monopoly game. There is not even a family who loves each other. It is so ordinary on the street, even the leading role is very passersby.
It also didn't hide the "skeleton in every closet", but instead it played, it teased, it disintegrated itself. It is a stage play with a rudimentary setting. We saw the story under the lights and the shadows behind the curtain.
Also because of its super ironic tone.
At the beginning of the film, the supervisor shouted slogans and asked them to serve the society and re-behave as Barabala. Nathan replied mockingly, but some were born scumbags.
There will always be young people who are crazy and impulsive, hate everything in school, fight and make troubles, use drugs and hide drugs, spray their mouths with dung, and have no scruples about themselves and others. You expect them to grow up politely in suits and leather shoes to enter and exit office buildings to become a construction society A member of?
I don't think even they can count on it themselves.
Sometimes I look back and think about my long youth life, which is so boring, but I still endure it. I can still read when I can't bear it.
I sometimes think about my classmates who used to spend their youth in a mess. Most of them are now more adaptable and uphold all adult norms and social discipline than I am.
There is such a small part, a small part, still insisting on being a, uh, out-of-the-ordinary person.
At least on the surface. But most people have become very boring people.
Isn't this society very interesting?
Then we finally grew up. I thought that I would no longer be threatened and raped by the system—everything that the schools had formulated, but that was not the case at all. The society has more profound and broader rules and systems, and there are more complicated and unspeakable hidden rules and hidden rules.
Sure enough, we should go to school so that we can gradually become a part of society.
Later we discovered that what we need most is not freedom, not what we want, not a mob, not a hero.
Rather, it is calm, safe, perfect system, and timely.
This makes me feel a bit sad. But I am not sad for those peace and perfect order.
Some are born out of place, anti-rule, immoral, and indifferent. They are indeed stupid or crazy in adolescence, and that is not the same as true evil, but no one is too lazy to distinguish themselves, including themselves.
These people are destined to be sacrificed on the basis of the overall interests of mankind. I guess those people who think that the rats in the gutter should be completely wiped out are that way. Because they are dirty, dirty, trash, and don't know how to be noble at all.
Human beings are a very, very tragic race, when natural nature struggles with growing cognition.
This film has been using this self-deprecating tone to embody this struggle, and expressing confusion in a self-destructive way.
So I especially like the sixth episode. When Simon was eating pizza while watching the female supervisor's corpse that was beginning to decompose. When Nathan was standing on the top of the building with a squirt gun, yelling that he wanted to be a bastard all the time, and there was a huge "virtue" banner underneath.
When we say "how should we do". In fact, none of them are so correct. But fuck, who needs to be right, especially when I don't fully understand the world, that is, before I am completely desperate.
This dramatic conflict scene is simply sparkling.
I appreciate this kind of flower that blooms in despair and incomprehension.
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