"I hate that i let this drag on so long, i hate myself; i hate that i let this drag on so long, you can go to hell" = "And I've enabled it for years! The games-- the binges, the middle-of-the-night phone calls... I should have been the one on the bus; not... you should have been alone on the bus."
Please help the family of a non-verbal autistic child (who has been losing weight because he only eats certain kinds of food, largely unavailable during this time) leave Gaza!
Girl finds out the book is not as good as the movie and is fucking devastated. Rethinks life. Fuck you mean "neil looked at todd angrily" He has never looked at that man with anything but pure awe and admiration as if todd himself hung the moon and stars in the sky. Neil looks at todd like he holds the world in his hands he looks at todd with the eyes of a newborn baby deer are you insane.
This part of the script to me represents how the poets felt and what they went through when first attending Welton.
These boys are incredibly young. The younger, the better for Welton Academy. There's less of the kids' minds to brainwash and manipulate. These boys won't know that there's other ways of doing things, only the Welton way.
These new students won't have Mr. Keating to push back the curtain of conformity and expose them to the light of freedom.
They will simply become exactly the same as the boys before, it's a vicious cycle.