Amira Casar

Amira Casar

  • Born: 1971-5-1
  • Birthplace: London, England
  • Height: 5' 5¾" (1.67 m)
  • Profession: Actress, model
  • Nationality: France·Ireland
  • Representative Works: Hell anatomy, station benches, reality, journey of finding love
  • Amira Casar (Amira Casar) , Director , French Irish, was born on July 1, 1971, actress and model. Catherine Breillat called her "the goddess of sexy muse with noble and sensual temperament."
    Representative works include "Anatomy of Hell", "Station Bench" and "Reality".
    Extended Reading
    • Laura 2022-01-19 08:02:20

      Dangerous poetry

      I watched "Beauty in a Bottle" last night. It was about the death of Plath, the confessional poetess. It is said that Petro and Plath looked alike, so she chose her to act. As a result, Petroleum's vase skills were directly diminished. In order to see what the film should be, it’s better to glance...

    • Scotty 2022-01-19 08:02:20

      I close my eyes and the world will die

      I read what Li Xiaoyu wrote many years ago and I mentioned in Cambridge that she had seen this Sylvia in the cinema there when she was in Cambridge. She said that American movies always smell strong at the box office and European movies are always humane.

         Sylvia is undoubtedly talented, but the...

    • Alisa 2022-03-25 09:01:19

      The script still hasn't captured Sylvia's soul, and Gwyneth Paltrow's acting is still hard to break through

    • Jerry 2022-03-17 09:01:08

      Sylvia Plath only wrote one novel “the bell jar”. The box is locked, it is dangerous. There are no windows so I can't see what is in there. There is only a little grid. No exit. She lives when , Pain, loneliness, and almost no one knows. After he died, he became a best-selling author, how ironic. Sometimes I feel like I'm not solid. I'm hollow. There's nothing behind my eyes. As if I never felt anything, all I want is blackness.

    Sylvia quotes

    • Al Alvarez: It's a...

      Sylvia: It's what? What is it? Is it any good?

      Al Alvarez: Good? God, yes!

    • Al Alvarez: That Daddy poem, the use of metaphor, the way it builds the end out blackness into an explosion of fury. But, it's just - stunning.