shoshanim
Joined Nov 2018
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shoshanim's rating
This was a hard watch: a poor struggling family, cynical cops, overwhelmed social services, abandoned children. Yikes!
Doesn't sound like much of recommendation but if you have the stomach for it, it is a powerful and human story dramatized and made all the more real by some truly superb acting. You fluctuate one moment from deeply disliking some of the characters to their breaking your heart in the next, from everyone seeming guilty to everyone's just a tragic victim.
The actor who plays Samir, the baby's dad, gave one of the most incredible performances I've ever seen, and the actor who played Jenni, his wife, as well.
Like I said, it's a hard story to watch, but the performances alone pull you in and make it worth it.
Doesn't sound like much of recommendation but if you have the stomach for it, it is a powerful and human story dramatized and made all the more real by some truly superb acting. You fluctuate one moment from deeply disliking some of the characters to their breaking your heart in the next, from everyone seeming guilty to everyone's just a tragic victim.
The actor who plays Samir, the baby's dad, gave one of the most incredible performances I've ever seen, and the actor who played Jenni, his wife, as well.
Like I said, it's a hard story to watch, but the performances alone pull you in and make it worth it.
If you've never known a person on the spectrum as Delia obviously is, you will have a difficult time empathizing with her during her horrific ordeal.
She can be cold, abrupt, and abrasive, even to the extent of seeming to make a bad situation even worse, shutting down, shutting people out, blaming and lashing out at others.
But that is not at all who Delia truly is. Those are her defense mechanisms when it comes to dealing with the real world.
I have a dear and close relative on the spectrum just exactly like Delia. She is extraordinarily brilliant, funny, and has the most tender of hearts. However, that is not how she will come off to most people she is not close to or trusts implicitly. She is an extremely literal person and very exacting about how things should be "just so", and very direct in her speech to the point of appearing rude or blunt.
But this all a result of her disability, though I dislike that word in reference to her.
She's just different, and only those who truly know her for who she is, and genuinely love her, get to see what an enormous heart she has within, coupled with a childlike innocence that struggles to live and cope in our harsh world, even in the best of circumstances.
Were my relative ever, God forbid, to have experienced anything even remotely like the horrific ordeal Delia did, I cannot even imagine how soul shattering an affect it would have on her.
Delia managed not just to survive, but even to thrive in spite of all of she went through. That in itself was a remarkable story.
P. S. I love Shaun Evans (Endeavor), but can't say I like him playing such a baddie. Makes me sad.
She can be cold, abrupt, and abrasive, even to the extent of seeming to make a bad situation even worse, shutting down, shutting people out, blaming and lashing out at others.
But that is not at all who Delia truly is. Those are her defense mechanisms when it comes to dealing with the real world.
I have a dear and close relative on the spectrum just exactly like Delia. She is extraordinarily brilliant, funny, and has the most tender of hearts. However, that is not how she will come off to most people she is not close to or trusts implicitly. She is an extremely literal person and very exacting about how things should be "just so", and very direct in her speech to the point of appearing rude or blunt.
But this all a result of her disability, though I dislike that word in reference to her.
She's just different, and only those who truly know her for who she is, and genuinely love her, get to see what an enormous heart she has within, coupled with a childlike innocence that struggles to live and cope in our harsh world, even in the best of circumstances.
Were my relative ever, God forbid, to have experienced anything even remotely like the horrific ordeal Delia did, I cannot even imagine how soul shattering an affect it would have on her.
Delia managed not just to survive, but even to thrive in spite of all of she went through. That in itself was a remarkable story.
P. S. I love Shaun Evans (Endeavor), but can't say I like him playing such a baddie. Makes me sad.
I consider the producers brave to have given McNally (in the character of Prof Cherry), a platform to actually speak out on a viewpoint which in today's pinched culture is considered anathema to even consider.
The writing on this series overall is not the best, far from it. But the character Cherry's denunciations of the dangers posed by the culture that pervades so much of the world, academia in particular, were extremely well written and on point. I imagine there must have been battles somewhere in the executive offices over even allowing it to be voiced. That's just where we live nowadays.
It was courageous and refreshing, and hopefully lit a spark in the minds of some viewers to further consider. We are on a slippery slope of intellectual devolution in our culture today, and if people don't wake up (and I mean the precise opposite of "woke") to that fact sooner rather than later, I genuinely fear for what kind of future we are creating for ourselves and civilization itself.
Well done.
The writing on this series overall is not the best, far from it. But the character Cherry's denunciations of the dangers posed by the culture that pervades so much of the world, academia in particular, were extremely well written and on point. I imagine there must have been battles somewhere in the executive offices over even allowing it to be voiced. That's just where we live nowadays.
It was courageous and refreshing, and hopefully lit a spark in the minds of some viewers to further consider. We are on a slippery slope of intellectual devolution in our culture today, and if people don't wake up (and I mean the precise opposite of "woke") to that fact sooner rather than later, I genuinely fear for what kind of future we are creating for ourselves and civilization itself.
Well done.