I haven't been able to watch the whole movie yet. IDK how close it is to what really happened, but it's too stupid.
Even more on the USA, where they have so many movies and series portraying civil rights. Even I know that in there whenever the suspect asks for a lawyer then the police has to stop and wait for a lawyer to talk to her. She should know it and refuse be undressed, the manager should know it.
It's damn stupid that police would phone anywhere and ask a local person, even a company manager, to do his job. If police was in her house, they'd send other police to take her into custody, not stay on the phone telling to an unknown person everything they'd be doing and let this person help the suspect flee or destroy proofs. Police can't delegate their job to non police ppl and ask them to inspect or investigate anything.
What's worth on the movie is that it shows the most basic principle of any nazi-like behavior, where a few ppl lead many ppl into throwing away their soul and hurt living beings: that they put themselves into command position and claim to take full responsibility for the actions they're commanding to do. Everybody must learn this method and that it's false. We do are responsible for what we do to other ppl, regardless of if somebody ordered us. We have to refuse, and to tell anybody willing to do it that it's wrong. And, on democratic countries where USA haven't promoted dictators to take away citizens rights, we do have to call authorities and denounce crimes, specially crimes done by authorities.
Can't find a movie or TV show? Login to create it.
Want to rate or add this item to a list?
Not a member?
Reply by Patrick E. Abe
on July 31, 2023 at 3:54 AM
Find the 2004 overhead camera footage on YouTube. The movie actually Underplayed what happened to the McDonald's worker! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFXeXK3szOk
Reply by bratface
on July 31, 2023 at 5:11 PM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compliance_(film)