100 dramas-02&03 Korean drama "National Death Penalty Vote" & "Illegal Justice".
I have recently been exposed to some Korean literature, and I am Xi even learning Korean for this purpose, and I also understand the Korean economy from Xiaolin's words, and some Korean social news will also be on the hot search of a certain wave, and the real Korean society is far more terrible than TV dramas.
What I want to mention here is "National Death Penalty Vote" & "Illegal Justice" launched this year, I watched them before and after, I don't recommend it but you can watch it, it's a cool drama and it's extremely close to the current situation of Korean society.
I used to be well versed in the development of Korean dramas and Korean dramas, and now when I watch these dramas, I think this is roughly because the screenwriter and director captured the public's extreme dissatisfaction with reality, and then dramatized it in film and television.
This is also one of the reasons why Korean dramas are good-looking, because they are too real!
Or is it another way and how the cultural industry is conveying dialogue to certain forces?
National Death Penalty Vote - Manga.
A referendum to decide whether a person lives or dies?Is it an exaggeration?Crazy or not?It's just that Koreans can be neat, written, and filmed like this, but its spiritual core is what is justice and what should be the end of justice?
The whole drama focuses on Kwon Seok-joo, a law professor, who personally enforces the law and turns himself in after his daughter dies in sexual violence, and the criminals do not receive final sanctions, but when they learn that the real criminals are at large while serving their sentences, the plan for the national death penalty vote begins.
There is only one target, the real criminal, the extralegal fanatic hiding behind the chaebol forces - Lee Min-so.
To be honest, I think this guy (Lee Min-so) is a psychopath, and after digging deeper, a child who has been extremely spoiled can't extricate himself from the abyss of 'if you can't get it, you will destroy it', and wants to get the attention of the professor, this is an extremely **selfish love, and he lives in his heart a demon or he is the devil itself.
In the process of actually watching the drama, I felt that Koreans are extremely dissatisfied with the unfair status quo caused by reality and the law, and every death penalty vote almost without exception ends with death, and is good at inciting emotions, and the rendering is also extremely in place, with a sense of 'this guy is sorry for the whole country if he doesn't die'.
I'm really good at shooting. Of course, these criminals do deserve to be gg.
But if this emotion is used by unscrupulous people, it is an indirect shaping, just like Lee Min-so in the play uses this software to manipulate the people to vote, and even makes himself a savior.
He really ......Hello!
In the end, the professor voted for himself, a 'hero' who succeeded in revenge and handed over his life and death to the people to die with honorSo the end of justice is the same endIt's hard to judge.
Illegal Justice - Manga.
is also a comic drama, "Illegal Justice" is simple and clear, just like its title, the so-called justice is illegal and unsightly, but the screenwriter raised a very core question: Justice in the dark, is it justice?
The protagonist Kim Ji-yong, played by Nam Joo Hyuk, is a good student at the police academy during the day, but after the arrival of night, he transforms into a 'law and order' who directly punishes criminals by dark heroes.
If "National Death Penalty Vote" is a way to involve the whole country in confronting South Korean law, then "Unlawful Justice" is a kind of personal heroism.
He does not believe in anyone, does not believe in the promises of any criminal, does not even believe in Korean law, and insists on solving criminals with his own justice.
The most ironic thing is that this 'dark hero', known as a criminal, graduated from the police university.
Both the madness of these two dramas and the violence index convey a mood of social discontent in South Korea and extreme dissatisfaction with legal loopholes.
Perhaps Korean screenwriters are asking themselves and social issues, what exactly is the law protecting?
Then I briefly checked some laws and regulations about South Korea, and the real situation is that South Korea is indeed a country that does not carry out the death penalty in substance.
The death penalty has not been carried out since 1997 because it wants to integrate into the 'humanitarianism' of the Western world and wants to be recognized by the West.
So the prototype of Su Yuan's case is still alive, and she was even released from prison after completing her sentence.
Quite explosive and outrageous.
However, the true spirit of humanitarianism is not in the form of letting the devil exist in the world, but in making justice full of humanity and lawlessness full of binding.
end&and
Violence is wrong.
Please live in accordance with the law.