Maybe I didn't understand it before, but now I understand

Kirstin 2022-04-20 09:01:42

I remember watching the beginning three years ago. My first impression was that the film was pretentious and lofty. Until I worked for a few years, I had experienced something more or less, not only getting along with others, but also spending time alone. When I first started working, I should be like the heroine, full of naivety and simple-mindedness, but as time rolled mercilessly, I experienced something similar to the experience of the male lead. I went to work, got off work, read books alone, ate alone, no Dare to love again but always look forward to someone who can understand you, become more and more ruthless, less and less able to live, just like the heroine said to the hero "Have you ever loved?" I rewatched the movie at this time, and I knew I was too ignorant to make that kind of comment. Previously, the male protagonist had retired and relied on daily eavesdropping on others to spice up an otherwise boring life. No one cared and no one needed to be concerned. There was only a bitch about to give birth, but the male protagonist seemed to have started to "don't want everything". It was ruthlessly pushed to the heroine, and was mocked by the heroine that "it's better not to breathe". If the male and female protagonists are not people who have no unforgettable experience, they will not be so sensitive, and they will not secretly develop feelings in back and forth exchanges, but they both have a period of unforgettable experience and long for someone to be able to Knowing their own (the heroine's current boyfriend is obviously unqualified), so they finally began to care about each other, the heroine changed the hero, the hero began to love life, and put the identification card on the born puppy affectionately , seeing the heroine being rescued from the storm, alone looking out the window and crying. However, but, obviously, there is always a young man in the film who has a life intersection with the heroine (the two do not know each other) but keeps missing, and the experience of the young man is the same as when the hero was young. Preparing for the judicial exam, dating a senior two years older than me, and finally getting dumped. Is the young man the incarnation of the male protagonist? Does the fact that the young man and the heroine keep meeting and missing out imply that life is like this, that they keep meeting and missing with the destined person until they know each other? Or is the next drama with a young man and a female lead? (I strongly hope that this is the case, otherwise the male protagonist will be pitiful...) In short, it is full of suspense and makes people feel the same way

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Extended Reading

Three Colors: Red quotes

  • The Judge: I want nothing.

    Valentine: Then stop breathing.

    The Judge: Good idea.

  • The Judge: Leave. It's your destiny. You can't live your brother's life for him.

    Valentine: I love him. If only I could help.

    The Judge: You can. Be.

    Valentine: What do you mean?

    The Judge: That's all: be.