Love and secular prejudice, how to choose

Frieda 2022-04-23 07:02:02

I used to like this movie, except for the music, maybe because of that desperate love. Looking at it now, it's really men's scum and women's green tea. Phantom is a musical genius, but the growth of a genius is often caused by many hardships and misfortunes, and often goes to extremes. The disfigurement of his face makes him extremely inferior, and the little girl is the only person who communicates with him. For him, she It is the only light in the dark world. He desperately wants to seize it. He thinks that trapping her and possessing her will bring light. This is not love at all, just selfish desire. As for the heroine, she has been with Phantom for a long time, and it can be considered as a platonic love, but when she saw the appearance of Phantom, there was only fear left, and love was so fragile at this moment. She had struggled, and she knew that it was the Phantom that resonated with her soul, but she finally chose a handsome and rich childhood playmate. There was no spiritual resonance. This was just a vanity, not green tea.
In fact, there is a bug in this plot, that is, why does the Phantom's music not reflect his dark personality? So the female protagonist's relationship with him is actually the male protagonist's routine? The male protagonist hides his dark side and has been with the female protagonist for so many years? If you have such a high EQ, you won't be so arrogant.
Speaking of reality, the choice of the heroine is consistent with the traditional Chinese concept of marriage. This point is that the world is in harmony. People's profit-seeking will choose the person with the lowest risk to form a family. But such a family needs a strong sense of responsibility to maintain, otherwise cheating is really not uncommon. Love and secular prejudice collide together, how to choose is really an eternal proposition composition.

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Extended Reading

The Phantom of the Opera quotes

  • The Phantom: Seal my fate tonight. I hate to have to cut the fun short, but the joke's wearing thin. Let the audience in. Let my opera BEGIN!

  • Raoul: [angryly] Why make her lie to you to save me?