The sad life of a Mexican diaosi, if it weren't for the policy of opening one eye and closing one eye of successive US presidents, these illegal immigrants from Mexico and Asia might have to die in their hometown, and then let the next generation Repeat your own sadness. These first-generation blacks have no education, worry about being caught every minute, live without a smile, and do the most humble jobs, but they have their own perseverance, for a reason to live, their families are their only belief. The moments of comfort the child gave him became what held him up.
It's a pity that this kid is a jerk, and he doesn't know what to do, but at the most critical moment of losing the car, the teenage child was tough enough to take his dad to get the car back. This Mexican child was born in the United States, and psychologically, he has the atmosphere of being in his own life. And the character of the father persuaded the whole movie, hitting the guardrail with the car in the face of the gun; when he lost the calling card that could call the child, he became virtuous; only at the most critical moment, did he allow himself to be exposed natural male. "Why do poor people have children?" The child asked his father a question. This question seems easy to answer, it is just the instinct of human beings to reproduce themselves. But I also sometimes have such doubts. From the most objective point of view, families in poor countries and ethnic groups have three or five children. What kind of fate will these children have?
I used to think that the male lead was a true performance, and at the lengthy Oscars ceremony, only one shot was given to this best actor nominee. He sat in a rather biased position and gave the audience a shy and imperceptible smile, as he has always shown in the movie, very authentic and pure. In the movie, Santiago, who gave him half a loaf of bread, eventually stole his car under the weight of life. It was very sad to see that the change and persistence of human nature are often in the line. I suddenly remembered the part played by Du Wenze in "Broken Things". After getting his help, the sex worker naturally leaned on his shoulder. The two people who would definitely be strangers had the most primitive feelings at that moment. , isn't everything just a line in between?
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