An anticlimactic movie about love

Russ 2021-12-18 08:01:10

"Anna Karenina" is the book that has the greatest impact on my first two decades of life. At that time, I was less than 16 years old. During the Spring Festival, the adults were playing cards next door. I sat on the bed holding a book, listening to the Spring Festival Gala, watching Anna dying of illness in the delivery bed, crying quietly. I texted my boyfriend at the time, saying that while reading a book, a woman had a child and almost fell ill. He said you wouldn't. Then he was silly and happy, thinking that he seemed to have such a say in love. When I return this book after school starts, I will be single again.

The biggest stimulus to me from this book was that when Anna was about to die of illness, Wollensky shot and committed suicide. However, three months after the two finally went away and flew away, they began to tire of Anna, and then left it in the cold, which eventually led to Anna’s suicide. .

I also discussed with my dad: The most important thing for a person is life. If a man is willing to give up his life for you, how can he lose interest after having you for three months? Of course, my father’s answer is translated: too simple! sometime native! I'm really anxious for you!

Okay back to the movie. This movie is really the best in the adaptation! The formal narrative method, the appropriate emotional tension, the seductive and hardworking actors, and the accurate interpretation of the original (reflected in the selection of the lines of the key scenes) all made me enjoy watching it very much.

Spoiler alert. Some of my favorite lines in the film.

The first is a few words from Anna during the passionate scene between Anna and Volensky. The difference between literary and A-films in passion drama, in addition to the specific exposure scale, should be reflected in who the woman is talking to. Anna asked God for forgiveness, saying that Wolensky was the executioner, and that this was true love. It was all her true thoughts, and she said it was for her heart. I remember when I was discussing "Lust Caution" with others, that women actually think with their lower body. She would believe her body told who she loved, so Tang Wei would sacrifice her life and Leehom's life for "love", and Anna gave up shrinking oil for "love".

The second is what Anna said when she started to be a jealous lover: In order to have me, you have lost too much, so you don't love me now. Nima, my tears fell when I saw this line. If I were to use one sentence to summarize the subject of this book, then I would definitely use this sentence! This is also part of my concept of love. Even if I am worthy of you today, giving up your job, giving up your family, giving up social communication, giving up your reputation, then when you get it, one day, I won't be worth that much. (Of course, if you don’t want anything, he should kick you or he will kick you.--!) This is also the reason for Anne Hathaway’s final breakup in "Becoming Jane Austen": You are in order to and I became poor together, and sooner or later we will hate each other because of poverty.

The place to complain a little is the role of Jude Law, since the beginning of the movie I have been surprised that he turned out to be Anna's husband! Na Nima is like a dead old man with bald, fat, bad breath and yellow teeth. It's a pity that things went against my wish. Well, in fact, Wolensky is really handsome, but Jude Law is really Wolensky in my mind! ! ! Is it because he must act as a husband for self-breakthrough and the director's request? But who sleeps in the same bed with Jude Law every day and cheats! ! ! I continued after the nymphomaniac. When I read novels, I always hated Anna's husband, because he was a hypocrite who was ruthless, tortured, threatened Anna, hypocritical, but in the movie, Jude Law really makes people hate it, I can only say The social barrier caused by low EQ seems to be more pitiful than Anna.

The second half of the film is a little bit bigger than the content. Most of the original work describes Anna’s life in the countryside with her lover after she leaves her husband. Watching the love she lives on die a little bit, that’s the real tormenting stage. Maybe that's what Tolstoy really wanted to say. But this is too difficult to show with the method of the movie, so the two people’s disparity and Anna’s death are not explained clearly enough, and the famous "four all" is not shown. It feels like Anna is just eating too much morphine and getting paranoia. Committed suicide.

I never thought Anna was cheating. When a child who had never eaten sugar discovered the sweetness of sugar, no one could stop her from eating it, including herself (this is why humans change teeth, right? Only after eating it and discovering that the sugar is sweet, but will cavities, get fat, and get sick, and so on, she knows to restrain, and then if you continue to eat, then that is cheating, and that is a disobedient bad boy. It's a pity that she loves too much and has no chance to correct it. Is this the reason why she must die? I really feel sorry for her.

The other main thread of the story is Giti and the yellow-haired man. Tolstoy would always find a spokesperson for himself in the novel and say something the author wants to say. The main point of this line is that the goddess left after being played by Gao Fushuai can still live with Diosi! How idealistic~ I remember that in the original book, there was a pregnant Jiti and an extremely irritable Anna meeting and chatting. The atmosphere was very subtle. Anna had a sense of frustration that was counterattacked by a female cock. This was also the indirect reason for her suicide. Huang Maonan played really well, well, it is convincing for Giti's final choice. This is also the concept of love recommended by the author, but I suspect that they will have a similar derailment after nine years of marriage. Of course, maybe not. Kitty has a bit of memory after suffering from the handsome guy’s loss, but then again, the scars are forgotten and the painful sections are staged every day, who can be sure about the future...

this film Tell us, when love burns...well...you are burned to death.

I want to watch it again! ! ! !

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Extended Reading

Anna Karenina quotes

  • Alexei Karenin: Is this about my wife? My wife is beyond reproach. She is, after all, my wife.

  • Alexei Karenin: You begged me for my forgiveness.

    Anna Karenina: But I didn't die and now I have to live with it.