Mikkel Bratt Silset

Mikkel Bratt Silset

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  • Extended Reading
    • Carli 2022-03-29 09:01:09

      The contradiction between the presentation of art and reality

      The 7.22 bombing in Norway explores the similarities and differences between the rule of law and the rule of state. Let me see the director's control in dealing with the combination of terror and politics. In my opinion, the law is an important means to restrain people from committing crimes. In...

    • Ellen 2022-03-29 09:01:09

      The subject matter is a little heavy, please enjoy it with caution

      Watch out for movies with this theme. The depressing and heavy atmosphere was infected. All parties are under pressure. No one has the right to decide the life and death of others. The opening events are presented as absurd, and anger is aroused. Later, a lawyer with professionalism, a boy who...

    • Wilbert 2022-03-18 09:01:09

      Adhering to the director's always stern style, the perpetrators, victims, victims, family members, media, and the government all showed extremely rational restraint. The background and causes of the terrorist attack have only been tried, but I just calmly and firmly stated the "Norwegian dream" of the senior white leftists through the mouths of the people. Violence cannot solve the problem. I have the love of my relatives and friends, and I have a future. Go play ps games in the ensuite cell of the room, you poor loveless bastard. Thinking of this demon who slaughtered 77 people, it is possible that I got "Red Dead Redemption 2" earlier than me, and I deeply realize what it means that you are not living in a peaceful era, but living in a peaceful country.

    • Elisha 2022-03-24 09:03:45

      Wonderful! It is possible to make such a theme so thought-provoking, and the events are explained in one go, and I give the director a thumbs up.

    22 July quotes

    • Judge Wenche Arntzen: Can you tell us what happened to you on Utøya, Viljar?

      Viljar: Yes.

      [has a flashback in his head]

      Viljar: He tried to... he tried to kill me. I remember... seeing him... and then running away... trying to find somewhere to hide, and protecting my little brother. I remember being shot. Five times. When I was lying on the beach, I was... all alone. In a kind of pain I couldn't imagine.

      Judge Wenche Arntzen: But now you are here.

      Viljar: But everything's different. I've had to relearn how to use my body. Learn how to walk again. How to feed myself again. I have little use of my left arm, and I'm... I'm blind on one eye. But that's, uh... that's a relief.

      Judge Wenche Arntzen: A relief. How do you mean?

      Viljar: [laughs shakily] A relief, in a way that at least now I don't have to look at him.

      [some of the people in the audience laugh briefly]

      Viljar: But of course it's not that simple. I... I have a fragment of his bullet lodged in my brain that could kill me at any time. And I don't look like the person I used to anymore, I... My body, it's... it's broken. And the worst is that he... he killed Anders and Simon, my best friends. Stopping them from making their mark on the world, and... and they would have made it a better place. And I... I miss them every day. I'm sorry, I... I didn't... I didn't want to cry. I so much didn't want to cry in front of him. I... I wanted to stay strong. Because I do this for them. So they will not be forgotten. And when you shot them and left me alone on the beach, I didn't know if I was living or dying. And I've been stuck there ever since. But now... I realize that I got a choice. Because I still have a family... and friends... and memories. Dreams. Hope. And love. And he doesn't. He's... completely alone. And he's going to rot there in prison, whereas I... I survived. And I choose to live.

    • Geir Lippestad: You can't call the Prime Minister. And Norway isn't on trial. You are.

      Anders Behring Breivik: Are you sure about that?