It's a very horrifying event seeing the lifeless body of 19 year old female in a sugar plantation, and it's another hit knowing that she died because of a broken neck. Just 500 meters away from home in Bacolod City, Melcah Melgar's body was found and her head (skull) was forcefully pulled away from her body that it wasn't attach to her spinal column anymore. The heartbreaking part was many have seen the actual events before the untimely death of the girl. The scene started when on her way to school a man riding a motorcycle invited Melcah to ride with him going to school. She insisted no, her friends even teased the teenager. After the class her classmates didn't expect that it would be the last time that they'll see their friend. Many
The Nazis just stood in her blood like they didn’t even care they took a little girl’s life. There was three teenage boys, all looked like they were the age of 15. The first Nazi was big, he
"The Black Girl" uses suicide to shock the audience into realizing the message of the story. Although the message is harsh, it is also real, and the point is well taken by the audience.
The terrifying scene of innocent women getting beaten up in jail was the results of women who tried to gain their rights. About 30 women was convicted of obstructing sidewalk traffic and some got kick and slammed on the wall. The guards left no mercy to women whatsoever as they dragged them along like dogs. In jail, they were bleeding and every single movement was being watch. It was unbearable and bloody to watch. In this period of time, the authorities will do anything they could to get what benefits them most. For example, Lucy Burns was one of them who got her hands chained on the cell bars and hanged throughout the night, breathing and gasping for air. Without a doubt, the terror and the pain really stood out the most and has the greatest
It was October 22, 2017….first period of freshman year my best friend Casey got a call to the office. She came back in the room and looked distraught there were tears rolling down her face. Casey never had this look on her face and she never
The sadness of the girl’s eyes, how her hair and clothes are kept, the way she is seats on the ground, and the way her head is turned makes the audience feel a sense of sadness, empathy, and a sense of determination. A viewer would
The stories of surviving victims are bone chilling and heart wrenching," To escape her violent brother, 14-year-old Manna ran away from home. At a train station, a young woman noticed Manna crying and offered to help,
That's when she knew it; they were all going to die from this disease, which was spreading across their land. Her auntie was the first to die, next was her baby sister and her mother too. She knew it was going to take her life too. Tears surged down from her eyes saturating the ground. Her body was like a burning fire. As the sun rose, the next morning, she will disappear like the night. She couldn't handle it anymore the heat and the pain were
The scene before the three was a demoniac display of how fragile the human body truly is, for this weak shape was torn so brutally. What on earth could have done such horrors to her body? By the looks of it, large incisions lined the upper half of her body in a manner akin to bite markings. Her lower half was mainly scraped and bound by the cords that held her in place, agglutinating to her thighs, making indentations in her already bruised carapace.
They would be off to separate colleges, and their lives would take them in different directions. Her heart ached at the thought of never seeing him again.
The story is a sad one, but the tone in the movie was actually quite comedic. The violence in the movie is quite comical instead of frightening as well. This also provides more meaning to the violence. For example, there was a shooting scene when
It’s the start of Amara’s junior year. She’s been distant from her friends the unspeakable
Straight from the womb she was pulled and taken to that scary machine that pumped her lungs clean. Everything happened so fast, she wasn’t able to feel her mother’s touch, hear her voice, or even open her own eyes. She was born addicted and feeding for that supply her mother used so heavily. The family was expecting to see her but was rather informed that she would be spending the next few days in the hospital, and would not be going home anytime soon. She would be placed with people they call her family, people that weren’t her mother and father, but people that would be able to provide her with the things her parents weren’t capable to. And within less than a day 's time, her life was flipped upside down and all she could do nothing but live by it.
We see her journey through the helpless adolescent, engrossed in her daily chores, hopelessly succumbing to the fallacies painted by her eccentrically cold-blooded grandmother. She is pushed into the flesh trade, mercilessly, because the house burnt down in an accident. We then see her being used like
It was a long day at work, and it's about time for you to go back home to your 14 year old daughter. You cannot wait to see her since she finally got dropped off from her friends house and is now home. You want to buy her some flowers to surprise her since it is her 14th birthday. You want to call her to ask her what color of flowers she would like but she wanted so surprise her. At the grocery store you get some red roses, her favorite. You're now driving home and pull into the driveway. You walk into see your daughter lying on the floor, all bloody, with a bloody knife in her hand. A note is next to her, you read it crying. It says, “I'm sorry, I couldn't handle life with all my friends that have bullied me, I love you.” That day, her daughter died from teen suicide. (“don't let me go,” the song plays in the background of this documentary.)
The amount of time she had with them was long, but not nearly long enough. As the school year drew to a close, she knew the time was coming. The best friends she could have ever dreamed of were going to leave for college and leaving the junior behind. Each day, she would hear the senior class getting more and more excited for the upcoming graduation ceremony, unable to wait to be free of the daily high school . Every day her friends’ excitement grew, the more her thoughts were filled with dread. “What would I do without them?” … “Nobody else is as mature as I am” … or worse yet: “Who am I to sit with at lunch?!” For years she had been told to make her high school career count or it