Departure made me rethink what it means to ādepart.ā Itās strange how a film about funerals can be so full of love, humanity, and reconciliation. Everything is simple, yet devastatingly beautiful.
I see Eun su as one of those people who get caught at the airport for drug trafficking. When you hear their story, you get why they did it most of the time, itās the same kind of situation. The way she got so desperate to sell the drugs to help her husband is heartbreaking. Sheād do anything for her family, and honestly, I donāt blame her. Iāve heard so many stories like this, and the desperation is just unimaginable
it's parent's dilemma š he was an excellent judge-as far as we are being shown so far- but faced with a looming…
The only thing he did right was try to get his son to turn himself in. Death threats or not, he shouldāve done the right thing. Now his hands are just as dirty as his sonās.
Ep. 2: Things are totally out of control now, and not even Qin Yu can calm his own son. I feel so bad for the boy stuck in prison sleeping on the floor, while Yi Wei is all comfy. Honestly, Yi Wei is starting to annoy meš”
The first episode gave me that feeling I hope he gets punished, but at the same time, heās a good judge. Then it hits me: if he were really a good judge, he wouldnāt cover up his son.
>those who should have protected them failed. >the world ignored the screams, the reports, the wounds. >they grew up knowing that fear and pain were real. >violence is never justified, but when no one acts, it only breeds more violence.
>the world ignored the screams, the reports, the wounds.
>they grew up knowing that fear and pain were real.
>violence is never justified, but when no one acts, it only breeds more violence.