This film brings us back to reality to a certain extent.
Because of course it is easy for people to forget the pains of the past. When you make gay jokes with people around you, do you still remember the sissy kids who were grouped and isolated when you were studying? When you are your rotten girl in the second dimension, you are proud of the spring breeze, but do you completely look down on the comrades around you who are not handsome?
And this is precisely the reality.
When the party crisis is approaching, most people will choose to remain silent for self-protection. The silent majority is often not the truth. They just don't dare to speak, they don't want to speak, and they can't speak out of fear. People who speak out are often regarded as heroes at first, and then they are knocked down from the altar and attacked inside and outside. Why is Ned played by Mark Ruffalo always so angry? Externally, no one wants to listen to the demands he represents; internally, his companions cannot stand on the united front with him and win the battle together. He can only say desperately, Who's gonna save my Felix? The heartache in the more sense of the role of the peacock lies in watching his azure blue eyes being taken away by the disease and stained with light and gray. He was the light of love to Ned, but he was eventually taken away and only Ned was secretly hurting himself at the GayWeek ball.
Tommy, played by Jim Parsons, was so heartbroken at the end of his funeral speech. "why God letting us die not helping? Maybe he just doesn't like us." This experience is too desperate. Abandoned by family (such as Ned), abandoned by friends (such as Bruce), abandoned by the country, abandoned by the almighty god. In any religion, love is not a sin, but same-sex love is irreversible. Ned longed for the same love from his brother, but his brother couldn't say a certain answer.
As long as people still believe that Being gay is a disease can be cured, this group has every reason to continue fighting.
I don't make up what I wrote in the middle of the night. (The
name of the worthless article is a West German movie in 1971
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