A ture story - don't get too into the drama

Keith 2022-04-20 09:01:27

If there is no "A ture story" at the beginning of the film, it condenses in front of the audience who enters the play. The ending of the film will not suppress our thoughts and make people struggle in a dead water of hope.
Jolie's soft and great but simple mother's love has been mixed with too much selfishness, greed, distortion and filth by the evil society. But she took on and faced them one by one without any fear, just as she explained to the child that her father's departure jokingly: "He left only because he received a package on the day you were born, and the contents in it were called "responsibility" "Behind her hysterical weeping and her fragility like a gossamer is a powerful persistence that makes people look up.
The plot in the mental hospital is similar to that of "Flying Over the Cuckoo's Nest", with people and ghosts upside down, ironically dislocated, when the prostitute slaps the doctor in the face, the film is activated again, like a burst of blood, piercing the artery of the times , after giving an enjoyable catharsis, pulled into the icy shiver again.
The police station, which regards brutality as its belief, reverses black and white, and for the sake of "political achievements", it is bloody and high-sounding. The corruption of the judiciary has left the world in despair. They single-handedly created a perverted murderer who killed 20 children, and then cruelly created the darkness of the world.
The film is very suffocating to watch, love and darkness collide. People's blood sometimes coagulates and sometimes channeling.
The ending was heart-wrenching, especially Jolie's confident son's smile. Find out the panic of the audience who are too involved in the drama, and then panic to find out whether this "A ture story" really found a lovely son.
Hope is always good. . . Hope it must be good.

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Extended Reading

Changeling quotes

  • Detective Lester Ybarra: If that's how you want it, then I guess we're done here. Tell county jail we're remanding him for trial.

    Arthur Hutchins: Wait. I didn't do anything. I wasn't even here when it happened.

    Detective Lester Ybarra: By pretending to be Walter Collins, you're interfering in a police investigation of a kidnapping and murder. We can try you as accomplice to that murder after the fact. That's too bad. County jail is a lot worse than a juvenile hall or a foster home. It's a lot worse.

    Arthur Hutchins: You can't do that. I'm just a kid.

    Detective Lester Ybarra: Mm. Sanford Clark's a kid, too. Fifteen. He's going to jail. All murderers and their accomplices go to jail. Everybody knows that. Get him out of here. It's out of my hands now.

    Arthur Hutchins: Wait. I don't want to go to jail.

    Detective Lester Ybarra: [pause] Prove it.

    Arthur Hutchins: I... I knew Los Angeles is where they make the Tom Mix movies. I figured if I could meet Tom Mix, maybe he would let me ride on his horse. His horse is named Tony. Did you know that?

  • Dr. Jonathan Steele: According to your file, you believe that the police substituted a fake boy for your son.

    Christine Collins: No, I didn't say he was a fake boy. He's not *my* boy. They brought home the wrong boy. My son is still missing.

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: Well, that's strange, because I have here a newspaper article with a photo of you at the train station, welcoming home your son.

    [shows her the article]

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: That is you in the photo, isn't it?

    Christine Collins: Yes.

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: So, at first, he was your son and now he's not your son. Has this been going on for a long time? People changing, becoming something other than what they are?

    Christine Collins: People don't change.

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: You don't think people change?

    Christine Collins: No, that's not what I...

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: Shh! The police, they're not out to persecute you?

    Christine Collins: No, they're not.

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: No, they're not. The police are here to protect you.

    Christine Collins: Yes.

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: Really?

    Christine Collins: Yes.

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: Well, that's odd, because when you were admitted, you told the head nurse that the police were conspiring *deliberately* to punish you. So, either the head nurse and the interns are also conspiring to punish you or you're changing your story.

    [pause]

    Dr. Jonathan Steele: Do you often have trouble telling reality from fantasy, Mrs. Collins?

    Christine Collins: No...