Nếu bạn tìm được bản Vietsub chuẩn, hãy chuẩn bị một đêm thật yên tĩnh, một tách trà nóng và một tâm thế sẵn sàng đối diện với những cung bậc cảm xúc phức tạp nhất của trái tim con người.
All Things Fair is not an easy film to watch, nor is it meant to be. It resists the comforting narrative of the “older woman as teacher” and instead presents a bleak, honest portrait of abuse masked as romance. It reminds us that history is not just made of battles and treaties, but of the small, cruel decisions people make in their bedrooms. By the film’s devastating final shot—Stig riding his bicycle away from the carnage, his boyish face now marked with a permanent sorrow—we understand that he has left his childhood behind forever. The “fair” things of life: trust, safety, and innocence, have been sacrificed to the twin gods of war and desire. For those who watch it, whether in the original Danish or with Vietsub, All Things Fair lingers not as a titillating drama, but as a somber meditation on the price we pay for growing up in a world that is anything but fair.