love is a cycle

Nico 2022-04-19 09:02:07

ANNE is a person with strong self-esteem, including insisting on not going to the hospital during her lifetime, attempting suicide, refusing to eat, and wailing in pain later, indicating that she has lived a very painful and dignified life.
Georges understood her. Even her daughter was furious that her mother would not be sent to the hospital for treatment. He insisted not to send ANNE to the hospital. Georges ended her lover's life out of love and buried her in a spacious coffin with clear air. , sprinkle little white flowers all over, this is love.

Georges had three hallucinations in the end. Anne washed the dishes, anne played the piano, and anne accompanied her out of the house. In his mind, anne was sleeping peacefully in the apartment, right by his side. He wanted to spend more time with anne and live a peaceful life with her. Life, washing dishes, playing the piano, and dressing before going out, these three points echo the settings in front of them are really great. Life is a cycle of reincarnation, and so is love.

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Extended Reading
  • Kacie 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    After re-reading it, I have to admit that I lost sight of it. What the film really wants to express is the respect for the personality of the intellectuals and their pursuit of the integrity of personal dignity and love that transcends the physical existence. However, the catching pigeon scene at the end highlights the intentional instillation of meaning, which can be removed.

  • Kylee 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    The apartment has become a love grave, and has been hit by both internal and external forces at the same time: the nurse, the daughter's visit, the pigeon and the broken lock in the title are all external forces that threaten "closed love"; in the face of death, each other's love is the only one The spiritual sustenance, this is the inner strength, even "love you to kill you" is the supreme state of love.

Amour quotes

  • Anne: It's beautiful.

    Georges: What?

    Anne: Life. So long.

  • Anne: There's no point in going on living. That's how it is. I know it can only get worse. Why should I inflict this on us, on you and me?

    Georges: You're not inflicting anything on me.

    Anne: You don't have to lie, Georges.

    Georges: [looks down at the floor contemplatively] Put yourself in my place. Didn't you ever think that it could happen to me, too?

    Anne: Of course I did. But imagination and reality have little in common.

    Georges: But things are getting better every day.

    Anne: I don't want to carry on. You're making such sweet efforts to make everything easier for me. But I don't want to go on. For my own sake, not yours.

    Georges: I don't believe you. I know you. You think you are a burden to me. But what would you do in my place?

    Anne: I don't want to rack my brain over this. I'm tired, I want to go to bed.