Noble aunts, petty-bourgeois dads, and working-class maids split this film into three systems.
The father, who cannot feed his children, neither wants to lose his aunt's support nor marry the lower class working people, so he prepares to marry a weird widow. Beautiful, generous and kind-hearted, she has almost all the advantages in one body except that the maid who was born in poverty loves the child's father deeply, but her deep inferiority makes her unable to say it.
So there was a nanny with magic, and he used magic several times, so that the children sent the maid to the aunt's education-in this way, the maid had the status of a nobleman and became a noblewoman. Adopted daughter.
Then a lover got married and everyone was happy.
We can say that this is a beautiful dream of the petty bourgeoisie of innocence and greed. You want women, you want money, and you want status. Of course, the woman is deeply in love. How can there be such a greedy person! I'm really embarrassed to say it. So this movie takes a different angle and expresses it from the perspective of children, as if everything is caused by children, and the deep desires of adults are very secretive.
Isn't it? Before the wedding, who of you could see what kind of love his father had for Evangeline?
View more about Nanny McPhee reviews