This is not a palace fight.
If it was Gongdou, Abigail played by Emma Stone would be the protagonist. In this way, she could make half a movie in the scene where she was being ripped off when she was a low-level maid, corresponding to about ten episodes. Then there is the humiliation and the scheming to climb the ladder, and finally win the big victory (though I don't know what kind of victory that is). Is this interesting?
However, wasn't Colman, who played Queen Anne, the one who won the Oscar in the end?
Two actors, Abigail and Sarah, were nominated for Best Supporting Actress.
Watching this play with Anne as the protagonist is her love and despair. And Abigail, as a later person who climbed up from below, is just a testimony to such love. The title of the film The Favourite, the favorite, is Anne's favorite, and her favorite used to be and always has been Sarah.
At the beginning of the film, Sarah can be said to be outspoken to Anne, even telling Anne directly, you look like a badger. Is it for her? I am afraid that the person who loves again has limits. Love is not the reason for harm. In some cases, speaking up can actually be a rude injury.
In the second half of the film, when Anne was waiting for Sarah's letter, she was at a loss as to what to do. I'm afraid everyone who has loved has experienced it. And Sarah wrote and tore, and tore and wrote, from "you bitch" to "I want to poke your eyes out". I'm afraid it's also to the point where it's wrong to say it.
Sarah didn't say a word to the Queen even though she knew Abigail had poisoned her. In contrast, look at Abigail, who self-harmed and then blamed Sarah. At the end of the film, she also framed Sarah's husband and wife for corruption. The Queen probably doesn't look down on Abigail's character. Sarah threatened her with the surging love letters the Queen wrote to her, which was the last straw that broke the Queen's heart. Sarah knew it was wrong, so she burned the letters.
From start to finish, Abigail was little more than a replacement.
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