Some thoughts:
1. The director handled the conflicts inherent in the plot very well. Morality and law, emotions and rationality are really eternal topics that are constantly tangled up and chaotic, and even if they are unclear.
2. Pay attention to the scope of this film: social security issues in the slums of the UK, and juvenile delinquency issues. Don't cover it with a few points, and expand it to the entire UK for granted. (Not to protect the United Kingdom). Whether it is the general situation in the UK remains to be confirmed.
3. The British people can expose the dark side of their society. People with this courage can be called citizens, and the society that gives people this kind of power can be called civilized. Perhaps the British authorities were not happy to see this kind of film, but they did not censor it after all. By comparing inside and outside, you know who is happy and who is miserable. (Don't look at what they said, but look at what they did.)
4. In several rival scenes between the female police officer and her boss, it can be seen that the style of the agency is really the same in the world. Both the wording and the means are exactly the same as ours.
5. Originally I thought it was a heavy and desperate movie, but I laughed when I saw the development of the story of the female police officer and Uncle Harry being near death and resurrection. It turns out that the screenwriter can't be cruel. The screenwriter must still have a glimmer of hope for kindness in his heart.
6. If the plot is sentenced to prison by Uncle Harry, will it enhance the drama of the story? Thus, it highlights the contradiction between morality and law, and can more arouse people's deep thinking. It is not clear how the screenwriter considered this issue.
7. Questions to be confirmed: Is there such a proliferation of drugs and guns in the UK?
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