Pivot

Dana 2021-12-24 08:01:56

There is no fairness in the world, it's just different.
But this film about unfairness allows people to see fairness.
Perfect fairness may be like this. You lie down, sit and stand, fairness is there, impartiality, and at your fingertips.
But where there are people, there is paste, which can ruin the most perfect design into sludge.
In the fable, the tortoise can outperform the rabbit, in the fairy tale the prince can slay the dragon, and in reality the voice of power is loud.
The film reflects this very well. The protagonist's determination, courage, hesitation, and even fear are seamless and distinct, like a blend of dusk to midnight.
If that's just the case, then enter the public bath.
Through the final concentricity of the husband and wife, the film allows us to see a fulcrum that was originally looming-the speech Mita and the judicial process. Through it, everyone has the opportunity to move the earth and win back dignity.
The most heartbreaking scene in the film is this. The male protagonist was eating with someone in a restaurant. He came back after urinating and found that a woman was telling his wrongs in front of his friends, and she was even moved. He is angry, arguing, speechless, retreating, and depressed.
The bad guys hurt you are called encounters and sufferings. The real tragedy is that honest people are stubborn on their own truth and hurt each other.
Sometimes we may really be a large group of people who don't know the truth. At that time, although we can't bring justice to people, at least, don't send unnecessary tragedies.

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Extended Reading
  • Dahlia 2022-04-22 07:01:39

    Uncle Pan can consider developing in the direction of Lao Pa's performance. Might have liked this a few years ago and now have reservations about the one-sided "based on true story".

  • Rebeka 2022-04-24 07:01:15

    Am I right that my voice is louder than yours? Is it necessarily true that the voice of the White House is a million times louder than me? ...don't arbitrarily substitute a noun in the previous sentence

Fair Game quotes

  • Diana: So do you have, like, lovers all over the world? Do you have a gun?

    Diana: [down to a whisper] And have you killed people?

    Valerie Plame: I can't. I - I... I can't tell you anything.

    Diana: You can't tell me anything... OK - alright. So... you want to go shopping? See a movie? Maybe mani-pedi?

  • Valerie Plame: One by one, everybody broke - except me. And that made me feel special. You can't break me. I don't have a breaking point.

    Valerie Plame: I was wrong.