Juno: Will God really forgive young people's mistakes?

I think it is not accurate to define Juno as a minor version of One Night Pregnant, because the whole framework of Juno is obviously divorced from the classic theme of "illegitimate children", and even its theme is far more meaningful than discussing the two topics of "illegitimate children", um, and "sexual behavior of minors". The cliche is how people communicate with each other. To be precise, it is what attitude should be taken when encountering problems. This attitude will determine your next behavior, and these behaviors will determine whether you can successfully overcome obstacles and move on with your life. This is the deepest impression Juno left on me. This movie, like many movies on the same subject, has a cliche beginning, even if the director Jason? Raterman mysteriously got the chair first. However, from the opening to the next 10 minutes, the film is still based on the idea that the heroine Juno had a pregnancy test without telling her parents, informed her friends, found an abortion clinic, and then went to the clinic to give up abortion. The opening scene, if it weren't for Allen. Peggy's humorous performance, I believe that the audience familiar with this subject should choose not to watch it. But the task of inheriting the classics ended in 10 minutes, and then everything, from the story to the tone and even the whole topic, had a new angle. The focus of directors and screenwriters began to blur the focus of Juno's underage pregnancy and focus on life. Juno's whole process from pregnancy to delivery is set as a cognitive process from ignorance to maturity for his own and others' lives, for his family, for love, and for good and bad. The perfect family (Vanessa and Mark) can collapse in an instant, and people's bad habits (Mark's different misunderstanding of Juno's friendly behavior) are far more desperate than the unmarried pregnancy of minors. Juno went to school with a big belly after she got pregnant. She was laughed at by her classmates (although the director didn't deliberately show this, she arranged for the female classmate who was "full of soup" to give Juno a few contemptuous expressions), the teacher's contempt, and the eyes of her peers staring at her curved belly. However, from beginning to end, Juno didn't shed a tear in this matter, and she even regarded these treatments as "I became the man of the school" indifferently. The first thing that made her cry was that Mark began to seduce Juno to live with him in suggestive language and told Juno that he was about to end his perfect family with Vanessa. Although Juno was aware of the fact that "many seemingly decent families may have disgusting things behind them" when looking for suitable adoptive parents for unborn children, when she saw that the perfect family in her eyes (well, no children) would be so bad that it would collapse, she had an unforgettable understanding of the common sense she had learned from TV dramas.