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Elza 2022-02-07 14:47:22
'The Pilot's Wife': Wait until Monday
Original address: http://www.qh505.com/blog/post/5311.html
Monday is the Monday after the weekend, Monday is the Monday where explanations can be heard, Monday is the Monday where everything will settle down, but Monday doesn’t come, Monday is even far away, when a day is not In the not-distant...
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Adalberto 2022-04-19 09:02:55
Love but not the most annoying
I watched "The Pilot's Wife" on the weekend after the debriefing week, the opening of Rohmer's "Comedy and Proverbs" series, and also met Rohmer, the second French New Wave director after Agnès.
The film tells the story of what happened to François, a second-year junior high school student, in a day...

Philippe Marlaud
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Murray 2022-04-20 09:02:33
Fall in love with men and women. Rohmer really knows how to make up stories. I don't know why I don't think the emotional communication between these characters is efficient at all. It's clear that things can be made clear by calming down in a sentence. So many dramas, good work. Nothing is wrong. Especially the 15-year-old female student. These people are too young too naive....obsessed by their own problem. Can't stand it anymore. (What is my state of mind?)
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Lonnie 2022-03-19 09:01:09
Incredible. In addition to filming the toss and turns in love as always, this time Rohmer also gave the actor the energy of action: at first, it was just to save the world and run wild, and then it took the most primitive human story motif "tracking" as the main axis; So in addition to the emotional tug of war between men and women, the movie has a rare suspense. The director designed a situation that was slightly beyond reality, and maximized the dramatic tension in it: the male protagonist was completely immersed in a kind of irrationality. Encounter in love can not help but ignite a trace of lust. Many times we can't face it, let alone explain to our lover what we really think for the first time. After the wonderful and delicate quarrel and reconciliation, Rohmer's greatness lies in arranging a nihilistic little epilogue, allowing the hero to inadvertently witness the disillusionment. He roamed the subway station headless like a fly, calmed down, and walked back to his life.