Ever since Roe v. Wade, the United States has been deeply divided on the issue of abortion. In that landmark case, an unmarried pregnant woman was refused an abortion in Texas and, with the ensuing judicial challenge, won American women the right to safe, legal abortions. Ever since, proponents and opponents have lined up on either side of the issue, launching verbal abuse - and worse - at each other. As the religious right has increased in size and power in the past decade, the issue has become even more divisive - and violent. Filmmaker Tony Kaye, best known for "American History X," has been working on "Lake of Fire" for the past fifteen years and has made a film that is unquestionably the definitive wo【ZiYuanTun.Com】rk on the subject of abortion. Shot in luminous black and white, which is in fact an endless palette of grays, the film has the perfect esthetic for a subject where there can be no absolutes, no 'right' or 'wrong.' He gives equal time to both sides, covering arguments from either extremes of the spectrum, as well as those at the center, who acknowledge that, in the end, everyone is 'right' - or 'wrong.' With graphic images of termination procedures and their aftermath, Kaye endeavors to show abortion's physical and psychological reality - to make clear what exactly is at stake. "Lake of Fire" - the film's title comes from one person's description of what awaits abortionists in hell - is a brave film, even a monumental one. And whatever you believe now, you are certain to think differently after seeing it. 译文(3): 自从罗诉韦德案以来,美国在堕胎问题上一直存在严重分{资源屯-ziyuantun.com}。在这起具有里程碑意义的案件中,一名未婚孕妇在得克萨斯州被拒绝堕胎,并在随后的司法挑战中,为美国妇女赢得了安全合法堕胎的权利。从那以后,支持者和反对者一直站在这个问题的任何一边,对彼此进行言语辱骂,甚至更糟。在过去的十年里,随着宗教右翼的规模和权力的增加,这个问题变得更加分裂和暴力。