andreamason-05240
Joined Nov 2021
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Reviews15
andreamason-05240's rating
Don't get me wrong, I feel bad for the "students". This had to be a horrible situation that has long lasting consequences to those people that have been affected.
It just feels like this film/documentary was a bit amateur. It could have been made so much more effective, eye opening and jaw dropping, if it didn't have so much goofing around.
At times it seemed like this was a chance/excuse for former students to come and rebel and "break rules" that they were forced to live with. Reenacting times they had and things they were thinking, but a lot of it laughing their way through it.
It's a terrible situation and hard to believe it got away with it for so long. But it was hard to take very seriously with them all joking, laughing, smoking, swearing ect.
It doesn't feel like a documentary, rather the majority of the film more like former students (who probably need therapy), getting together in the old grounds to reminace and joke. Then throwing some serious interviews in the middle to make it more like a "documentary".
In the end instead of being informative, it comes off as some immature young adults joking around. More professional interviews, stats on the effects, more hard facts, not just young adults who come across as still needing help, would have made this more enlightening and made you feel more outraged.
It just feels like this film/documentary was a bit amateur. It could have been made so much more effective, eye opening and jaw dropping, if it didn't have so much goofing around.
At times it seemed like this was a chance/excuse for former students to come and rebel and "break rules" that they were forced to live with. Reenacting times they had and things they were thinking, but a lot of it laughing their way through it.
It's a terrible situation and hard to believe it got away with it for so long. But it was hard to take very seriously with them all joking, laughing, smoking, swearing ect.
It doesn't feel like a documentary, rather the majority of the film more like former students (who probably need therapy), getting together in the old grounds to reminace and joke. Then throwing some serious interviews in the middle to make it more like a "documentary".
In the end instead of being informative, it comes off as some immature young adults joking around. More professional interviews, stats on the effects, more hard facts, not just young adults who come across as still needing help, would have made this more enlightening and made you feel more outraged.