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Abelardo 2022-01-02 08:01:35
I can't stand it when I see half of it, I really hate Emily...
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Michele 2022-01-02 08:01:35
Lars Von Trier’s movie screen is really terrible. Even if he knows the development of the plot, he is still psychologically tortured with Emily Watson and does not know what to do. That kind of grief, fearless and regretless sacrifice is really ridiculous. In the performance, Watson did a bone-in performance, and the audience felt a real pain. However, I feel sad and regretful for the performance of Caitlin Katliji. The failure to receive the performance is definitely an unjust case in an...
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Eveline 2022-01-02 08:01:35
"the deceased was suffering from being good. perhaps this is the psychological defect that led to her...
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Josefina 2022-01-02 08:01:35
Another holy fool. Women are victimized to satisfy male fantasies, and women die in exchange for male rebirth. Russ is indeed the most consistent accuser of religious authority, closed society, and patriarchal society (as for whether this kind of accusation is deep and effective is another matter, I really don't like to put "goodness" into the discussion). | Shooting on 35mm film, scanning it into a digital file, and then reprinting the modified picture into film to obtain the washed and faded...
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Oma 2022-01-02 08:01:35
It's a slightly neurotic woman again. I wonder if I should prescribe a neurotic woman's...
Breaking the Waves Comments
Extended Reading
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[first lines]
Bess McNeill: His name is Jan.
The Minister: I do not know him.
Bess McNeill: [coyly] He's from the lake.
The Minister: You know we do not favor matrimony with outsiders.
An Elder: Can you even tell us what matrimony is?
Bess McNeill: It's when two people are joined in God.
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Jan Nyman: Love is a mighty power, isn't it?