The culmination of a woman's YY

Jaquelin 2022-04-19 09:01:45

With the recent popularity of many TV dramas involving the issue of mistresses, women around and on the Internet are complaining about a problem. That is, they contributed the most beautiful and youthful time to the stunned young hairy young man, and when they entered middle age, they were no longer as aggressive as they were when they were young, and a bunch of ripped-off juniors jumped up. Come out to steal the mature, stable and successful uncles and husbands who have been trained for many years.

This is indeed a problem.

After watching Time Traveler's Wife, I realized that it's not just a problem for Chinese women, women all over the world are facing this problem, and Time Traveler's Wife is the YY mastermind that solves this problem.

Henry is a time traveler, traveling between the past, present and future. When Henry was thirty-nine, he went back to the past when he first met his wife, Clair, when she was eight; he went to the future that same year to say goodbye to his posthumous wife for the last time.

In reality, Henry and Clair met when they were young. At this time, Henry was a stunner, drinking, picking girls, and doing nothing. Clair already knew from the uncle-type Henry what the future Henry would be like, so she gradually trained a stunned Henry into a mature and stable uncle-type in the next few years. Henry. In the end, Henry died before her, but she could still meet Henry who traveled from the past after her husband died.

So let's analyze it:
YY 1: The uncle of the girl accuses
8-year-old Clair of falling in love with Henry, 39, when he first met him, and determined to be his wife. In real life, this kind of exaggerated uncle + loli combination is doomed to be impossible and unblessed. In the wonderful YY, Henry is a time traveler, that is to say, when the 8-year-old Clair grew up, when the uncle she controlled was still a teenager, she not only satisfied the girl's love for the uncle, but also realized her love for the young. carnal desires. No wonder Clair tasted the forbidden fruit on the first night he met Henry as an adult and exclaimed: Oh, you are so young. . . . . 囧rz. . . .

YY 2: The Queen's Complex of Young Women
Some people say that the wife is in a university, and the husband should study hard. It must have been said by a woman.
As mentioned earlier, for a young and beautiful couple, women must be more mature in thinking than men, which in most cases is determined by the physiological structure of human beings. Instead of being satisfied with marrying a stunned woman, they will inevitably be trained everywhere in the rest of their lives. Just like Clair, what she loves is not actually the real Henry, but the uncle-type Henry. So in the film, you can often see her little dissatisfaction, not because she doesn't love Henry, but because she loves the Henry she wants. And isn't that the case with that woman? Although to love a person is to love all of him, but all is never enough for a woman. It's like there is always one piece missing from the wardrobe full of clothes.

YY 3: The consolation of a bereaved husband As the
saying goes, there are three major hardships in life: the loss of a father in a young age, the loss of a husband in middle age, and the loss of a son in old age.
For women, it is the happiest time in life when they have completed the queen's training of loyal dogs and finally held their children in one arm and their uncle in the other. And often in life, many women who should be the happiest lose their husbands at this time. The resulting gap is greater than the damage at any other time. This may be the death of her husband, or it may be an affair, or it may be a long way to go. And Clair doesn't have this problem, because Henry is a time traveler, and he has laid the groundwork long before his death. Even after his death, Clair could still find him walking around naked.

However, I have to say that although Time Traveler's Wife is a very YY movie, it is also a very moving movie. Not because of those YY, but because it tells a very cruel reality, and it dares to let the people in the play face him bravely. That is the fragility of life.

Death pervades the entire film.

At the beginning of the film, Henry's mother was killed in a car accident, and Henry's father couldn't get rid of it for the rest of his life.
In the middle of the film, Henry and Clair's children have multiple miscarriages.
At the end of the movie, Henry is shot and killed on a beautiful night of fireworks.

Yes, life is fragile, and the characters are forced to confront that vulnerability.
Because of uncontrolled time travel, Henry went back to the past countless times, and experienced his mother's death in a car crash, but it was irreversible.
Knowing that Clair is prone to miscarriage because of the time travel gene, although she is heartbroken every time she loses a child in her womb, she still can't give up.
Henry's death date was already told by his daughter from the future, but he could only watch the day slowly approach and bravely face his own death.

Zixia said: I guessed the beginning, but I couldn't guess the ending.
In fact, knowing the ending and still facing it recklessly is the real pain.

Is this a rare noble sentiment?
This is what we all have. If there is life, there will be death, if there is gathering, there will be dispersal. If there is blossom, there will be a day of withering. If there is prosperity, people will inevitably go to empty buildings. These obvious endings are clearly written in front of our eyes. But everyone still smiles and faces every fresh morning.

It was two years ago that I read the original book of the film. Time Traveler's Wife is not exempt, I still have to say that it can't compare with the more complex and deep feelings in the original book. But as a standalone movie, it's worth watching.

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Extended Reading

The Time Traveler's Wife quotes

  • Clare at Eight: Are you married?

    Henry DeTamble: Yes, I am.

    Clare at Eight: Is your wife a time traveler?

    Henry DeTamble: No. No, thank God.

    Clare at Eight: Do you love her?

    Henry DeTamble: Yes. Very much. What's wrong?

    Clare at Eight: Nothing. I was just hoping you're married to me.

  • Clare Abshire: I wrote down every time that you came to visit me.

    Henry DeTamble: Which I gather I did, or will do, fairly often.

    Clare Abshire: The last time that I saw you, I was 18. Seems that you go back to the same places a lot.

    Henry DeTamble: Yeah, it's like gravity. Big events pull you in.

    Clare Abshire: I was a big event.

    Henry DeTamble: So it would seem.