The plot mainly tells: Zan's parents insist on giving birth even though they are unable to raise their education. As the eldest son of Zan, his weak shoulders bear the weight of countless lives. When his sister was forcibly sold to a vendor as his wife, Zan left home angrily, and then he met a mother and son who supported each other to make a living. However, the hardships of life forced him to take his parents to court, smiling and mocking fate.
The most sad scene in the whole film is that Zan rushes out of the house with a knife after learning that his sister Saha died unfortunately, chanting "I'll tell you what's gone". This film does not give a shot of Zan stabbing people, but directly switches to the picture of Zan being taken into the police station.
When stabbing a neighbor, this may be the only time Zan can rest. It looks like stabbing a person, but it also looks like stabbing the damn world or the damn country. Children of this age have just begun to understand the B side of the world, and Zan has not only understood it for a long time, but the real world is enough to subvert his beautiful fantasy of the world.
Here, girls are commodities that can be exchanged for money; A boy is a tool, responsible for bringing home the bacon and taking care of young children. Parents only care about their children, regardless of raising them, and regard them as cash cows and free labor. Not only can they not bring happiness to children, but they will only bring pain and suffering to children. ?
What we are doing now needs textual research, but parents don't need textual research. However, not everyone deserves to be a parent, nor does it automatically become a mother after giving birth. They just want to be happy for a while and let their children come to this world to suffer together. They don't deserve to be parents.