Come on, here? ! stupid money

Bethany 2022-04-20 09:01:41

Economic Game Theory? Youngest professor at NYU? Are these titles completely unsupported by this love brain? Most of the time it is the same as a decoration.

Based on the encounters in front of the heroine, in the end, let's not say anything about having a happy party and integrating into the rich circle? Are you not an independent and powerful New Yorker?

The front and back logic cannot be merged at all. If it is interpreted as personal collectivism emmmmm, it would be embarrassing to have value in Mary Sue.

I don’t watch many Southeast Asian-style films, but I’ve seen this kind of dark tone in several films, and I really don’t like it. It’s not that deep in color, it’s better than others, pretending to be deep.

By the way, is Michelle Yeoh's character nodding useful? When that grandma died? Can their family make a decision? If she can't coax her mother-in-law, and she can't control her son, she will give her a ring? Let's have a party, what about the blood and blood in the back?

With so much foreshadowing in front of you, what kind of grandson is the grandson that grandma likes to be the heir, and the custom family that grandma requires should be passed down, then you might as well say that the epiphany is a metaphor for the old man who is overshadowed by the sunset? Hmm, far-fetched

So those circles that are layered, twisted and twisted, foreshadowed by the grudges and grievances of the rich and the threshold, are just to tell me that when I have love, the whole world will make way for you?

This piece is purely about love, there is a problem with the concept of love, and it reflects the wealthy family, but it seems that the IQ of the wealthy family is not too high.

As for the film's bad reputation in the country, it's normal. To say that the score is low is to reflect arrogance or inferiority or preconceived ideas. From a simple story, this is a Nyonya rich Cinderella. I haven't made a good chick movie, what high scores do I need.

Since it is a commercial movie, it is normal for audiences who are not within the audience of movie planning to dislike it.

The audience of the movie with fragrant temples and clothes and jewels has seen it

There is no shortage of films about marrying into a wealthy family and a gentle prince.

The above two films combined are just right, and I have seen them all in China.

But such a lineup can have a selling point in terms of commercial value. Unfortunately, this set is not very popular in China. After all, in the comments, whether it is hype or derogation, they all agree that the content of this film is inconsistent with domestic values, and it is normal that there is no empathy in the country.

In terms of social effects, alas, it is indeed not easy for Chinese Americans to work hard these years, and it is not easy to prepare such a movie. Hollywood, Singapore, whatever. Otherwise, I really can't find the reason why Michelle Yeoh is here...

The following is not aimed at movies. I always feel that the Chinese people will make three, six, nine and so on, and then they really can't stand up.

Old school, it's nothing more than wrapping clothes twice to cover up the smell of blood, both ancient and modern, all over the world. I don't think the upstart is elegant enough, it's just that the fishy smell on his body hasn't been cleaned by you.

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Extended Reading

Crazy Rich Asians quotes

  • Rachel Chu: Thanks for meeting me here.

    [Eleanor eyes the other two women at the mahjong table]

    Rachel Chu: Don't worry about them. They're half-deaf and they only speak Hokkien.

    [Long pause as Eleanor reluctantly settles into her seat]

    Rachel Chu: My mom taught me how to play. She told me mahjong would teach me important life skills: Negotiation. Strategy. Cooperation.

    Eleanor Young: You asked me here, I assume it's not for a mahjong lesson.

    [Shows her tiles]

    Eleanor Young: Pong.

    [Snidely remarks]

    Eleanor Young: My mother taught me too.

    Rachel Chu: I know Nick told you the truth about my mom, but you didn't like me the second I got here. Why is that?

    Eleanor Young: There is a Hokkien phrase 'kaki lang'. It means: our own kind of people, and you're not our own kind.

    Rachel Chu: Because I'm not rich? Because I didn't go to a British boarding school, or wasn't born into a wealthy family?

    Eleanor Young: You're a foreigner. American - and all Americans think about is their own happiness.

    Rachel Chu: Don't you want Nick to be happy?

    Eleanor Young: It's an illusion. We understand how to build things that last. Something you know nothing about.

    Rachel Chu: You don't know me.

    Eleanor Young: I know you're not what Nick needs.

    Rachel Chu: [pauses] Well he proposed to me yesterday.

    [pauses]

    Rachel Chu: He said he'd walk away from his family and from you for good.

    [pauses]

    Rachel Chu: Don't worry, I turned him down.

    Eleanor Young: [sighs] Only a fool folds a winning hand.

    Rachel Chu: Mm no. There's no winning. You made sure of that. 'Cause if Nick chose me, he would lose his family. And if he chose his family, he might spend the rest of his life resenting you.

    Eleanor Young: [after a long pause] So you chose for him...

    Rachel Chu: I'm not leaving because I'm scared, or because I think I'm not enough - because maybe for the first time in my life, I know I am.

    [Choking back tears]

    Rachel Chu: I just love Nick so much, I don't want him to lose his mom again. So I just wanted you to know: that one day - when he marries another lucky girl who is enough for you, and you're playing with your grandkids while the Tan Huas are blooming, and the birds are chirping - that it was because of me: a poor, raised by a single mother, low class, immigrant nobody.

    [Shows her tiles. Gets up. Walks to her mom, who turns and glares at Eleanor]

  • Astrid Young Teo: It was never my job to make you feel like a man. I can't make you something you're not.