Freckle's voice is very recognizable, and the role of Alicia Vikander, who played the queen in "The Royal Mourning", has changed dramatically in this play.
The selection of materials for this film is very timely. A few days ago, "Last Week Tonight Show" was still calling for the rights of transgender people in the United States, and now the image of transgender people in society is further improving. I believe that in the near future, after transgender people are understood by more and more people and regarded as a normal thing, this movie will also become a landmark masterpiece... Of course it is now.
The T in LGBT is different from the first three. It is a group of people with a reversal of gender cognition, not a group of people with different sexual orientation. Of course, this blatant misunderstanding is also mentioned in the film.
This film documents two women. As his wife, Gerda was also a female painter, unlike most women of the time. She has a strong heart and is very brave. Not to mention Lily. The love between the two of them is beyond gender recognition, but for Gerda, it is still unfair. The love between two people is mutual appreciation in character and mutual affection in mind. Without Gerda's support, Lily wouldn't have been able to have a successful sex change operation.
Gerda must be helpless. When she found out her husband's gender recognition, she was at a loss. But at this time, Aber was even more panicked, and for a time thought he was schizophrenic. But at this time Gerda was very calm, she couldn't give Abe any help, she could only give him the only support and understanding she could give him. If a person loves himself, he must know what he wants in his heart and insist on pursuing it. When two people love each other, they support each other.
At the end of the story, like many movies, Lily had a dream. Her scarf flutters as she pleases, which is also a psychological comfort to the audience. We can't imagine in those times, if Lily survived, she would be discriminated against when she entered the society. This ending is also an artistic treatment.
So messy... In short, everyone belongs to a special group in society, and we always have something different from everyone else. In fact, special groups should never receive special care, because they are each of us.
Write this much first.
View more about The Danish Girl reviews