The so-called sorrow and suffering of americans are inevitably pretentious in front of the people of the world. In the end, it's just: eat and be lazy, and that's it.
Across the wall from the slums, Disneyland is both a huge tumor that continues to radiate from the surrounding slums and a haven for all the people in the slums to live and dream.

The Florida Project
The film wins over the story at the heart of the tragedy, wrapped in the cloak of dreamy candy.
The film revolves around a mother and daughter who live in a cheap hostel in Florida and "struggle" every day to pay rent and fill their stomachs. Her mother, a girl in her early 20s, is a typical "unscrupulous girl" in the eyes of many people, who has nothing to do all day and raises money by various improper means.
The daughter is also in the state of her mother's "free-range", enjoying a carefree "wild" childhood with a few of her friends all day. In their own view, this state of survival is not enough to worry about, as long as some eat and some live is enough.
Although it is full of children's running and laughing, this is by no means a simple movie about children, it is a ruthless puncture of the bubble of the beautiful world, and it is also a cruel coming-of-age ceremony for the little protagonists in the film.
I was first drawn to this film because of its bright and rough colors, unlike the refined and frosted vivid colors of the Grand Budapest Hotel. This bright and almost vulgar color scheme coupled with a strong yang guan is almost a metaphor for exposing the rough life under the yang guan, exposing the cruel fact under the bright color.
Although it is very realistic and cruel, what impressed me the most was:
In the film, harley, a young mother, she seems to be rebellious - smoking and drinking tattoos, unreliable. But no matter how poor and desperate, they have never lost their temper with their children, and have not turned their unhappiness in life into resentment and vented them on their children.
Classic lines:
Do you know why I like this tree? Because although it fell, it never stopped growing.