The film is adapted from real-life stories reported on Vanity Fair and is directed by the female director of "Lost in Tokyo" and Nicholas Cage's cousin Sophia Coppola. A group of young teenagers joined, Chinese actor Katie Zhang, Emma Watson, Tessa Farmiga, Ithel Brossard, etc. all appeared on the stage. The film is exquisitely filmed and the soundtrack is superb, which undoubtedly reveals the luxurious aura of American rotten men and big-name celebrities. Nominated for the Cannes Film Festival in one fell swoop, the final director Sophia Coppola won a directing award at the Women in Film Lucy Awards in the United States.
The film is different from "Spring Break" in order to cater to the audience's stray bikini, which completely allows the audience to enjoy the visual feast. Since it is a real person and real thing, it is extraordinary, even more than what the real person and real thing's "The Strong Men Robbery Group" requires. There is no such thing as a muscular man who ridicules the American dream. It just shows how the children's shoes that no one pays attention to spend their vain adolescence, and borrow the mouth of a young boy to tell the idea that "Americans have a perverted obsession with male and female thieves." Perhaps the director's original intention for the American people to reflect on "Celebrity Culture and Modern Civilization" has not received too much attention. However, such an undisguised mockery of the dark side of the Americans, no matter how profound and how real the incidents reflected, will ultimately end. It is conceivable that it will not be sought after by any mainstream media. Compared with the "Little Time" who is still concerned about adultery, this is a model for others to lead by example and let the latecomers as a lesson.
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