If only it was murder.

Jaunita 2022-04-24 07:01:10

Anne turned her face to the words "I feel so sorry for you" from her dear student's letter. Anne woke up one day, and her wife said politely: Your back is wet. It does not matter. How is Anne? It's hysteria after being ashamed. The nurse came to look after her, turning her over and talking about diapers. What does Anne's expression look like? It is better to live than to die. The nurse helped her take a bath, and she was still crying when she was unable to speak. Did no one see it? ? No, husband Joe saw it all. One detail is that before the female nurse leaves, it is normal for the patient to talk nonsense (don't worry too much). But hearing Anne kept calling her mother, Joe walked over to the bed and held her hand gently, and she was immediately quiet. If Anne was just a farm aunt instead of an elegant piano teacher, this might not be so bad for her. Why did Chen Xiaoxu prefer to become a monk when he was suffering from cancer, rather than having surgery when he was dying? I think Anne hates hospitals for the same reason.

Joe didn't lose his patience. It's not that I don't want to take care of her food and drink. Anne has been trying to commit suicide, and solemnly discussed it with Joe. Joe was very angry and apologized to her when he got angry. When Anne fell ill, Joe often blurted out - sorry, don't care who's right and who's wrong. Joe also added peach juice to her meal and wanted her to eat more. Are these impatient?


Was he relieved after he started? Did he finally no longer need to take care of his wife? Did he breathe a sigh of relief? no. If he wanted to get rid of it, it would be ok to throw Anne to the hospital, so why kill him? In the end, he sat alone with the pigeon in his arms. Seal up their house. Anne died and so was he.


I don't dare to watch a movie like this. It 's so uncomfortable...

I had an intuition that the director was from Germany, and at first glance it sure was.

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Extended Reading

Amour quotes

  • Anne: What would you say if no one came to your funeral?

    Georges: Nothing, presumably.

  • Georges: [telling a childhood memory] ... some banal romance or other about a nobleman and a lower middle-class girl who couldn't have each other and who then, out of sheer magnanimity, decide to renounce their love - in fact, I don't quite remember it any more. In any case, afterwards I was thoroughly distraught, and it took me a bit of time to calm down. In the courtyard of the house where grandma lived, there was a young guy at the window who asked me where I'd been. He was a couple of years older than me, a braggart who really impressed me. "To the movies," I said, because I was proud that my grandma had given me the money to go all alone to the cinema. "What did you see?" I started to tell him the story of the movie, and as I did, all the emotion came back. I didn't want to cry in front of the boy, but it was impossible; there I was, crying out loud in the courtyard, and I told him the whole drama to the bitter end.

    Anne: So? How did he react?

    Georges: No idea. He probably found it amusing. I don't remember. I don't remember the film either. But I remember the feeling. That I was ashamed of crying, but that telling him the story made all my feelings and tears come back, almost more powerfully than when I was actually watching the film, and that I just couldn't stop.