? justice?

Alvina 2022-03-21 09:02:01

After watching the whole film, maybe everyone wants to ask themselves what is justice? And are values ​​the most authentic vision and bottom line of human nature or the constraints that constrain human beings to complete the most rational decisions?

In my opinion, maybe as H said, when the two sides play a game, the winning side can always dominate history, can interpret justice, and can use all forms of moral and legal foundations, and these artificially created bottom lines of humanity, Constrain justice.

Let us make an assumption. If the final outcome is that one side of the interrogation achieves the ultimate goal by killing women and children, what is the difference between this and those so-called villains and terrorists? There are always people holding Bibles and laughing at those who carry the Qur'an on their backs. There are always people who step on the Qur'an and trample on everything the Bible has created. There is no absolute right or wrong in religion. Religion is always for politics, and politics is the interpretation of absolute humanity.

Maybe the film is restrained. In the end, he uses two people who still have universal values ​​to stick to the last bottom line of human nature, and we can't help but ask. This may be a paradox of train derailment. Do we choose to sacrifice the few in exchange for the lives of the majority, or choose to sacrifice the majority in exchange for the psychological comfort of the few? We don't know the answer, because it is a paradox from beginning to end, but we cannot deny that people are complex and contradictory, and we cannot interpret them.

There are always people who try to make the most rational judgments, but people are born emotional. Reason is always cold, without temperature, and cruel, while the brilliance of human nature is warm. The contradictions during this period cannot be reconciled, never reconciled, and absolutely impossible to reconcile.

The movie throws a paradox to the audience, but it also gives us more space to think. What is human nature? What is justice? What is a trade-off? What is good and evil? Maybe it was the 53 people killed by the bomb and the 2 children who survived under the knife in the film, maybe the nuclear bomb that was about to explode at the end of the film, maybe it was the evil and the good in each of us.

May justice stand up to the "melting pot" of "We fight not to change the world, but to not let the world change us."

May the evil bear the words of "Sutaro Temple", "I'm sorry for being born as a human being."

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Extended Reading
  • Colleen 2022-03-27 09:01:08

    The subject matter is novel, the plot is tense, and there is no cold scene. The description of human nature and the criticism of American hegemony are thought-provoking.

  • Clemmie 2022-03-28 09:01:03

    yes, this's new world.

Unthinkable quotes

  • [last lines]

    General Paulson: This never happened. They never existed. Younger, the children, none of them.

  • H: Bring me the kids.