I don't think Frida originally painted for the purpose of selling paintings for a living , but a vent and a transfer point sought in the extreme pain of the body, so as to enjoy the collision of their own inner thoughts.
The film describes Frida's creative process to the maximum extent, and the creative process is the process of feeling a very Mexican-style artist's rebirth to self-destruction; you can see in detail from the film that Frida's creation The process is expressed from close-up shots, and it is intended to find Frida's emotional confession from this process. It seems to be telling you, have you seen my pain? As for her paintings, director Julie uses a medium-scene shot to express, and at the same time, Frida and her paintings are placed in one picture. Such shots seem to tell you from a more objective and real perspective, from your point of view Looking at my paintings, can you understand what I want to express? It can be seen that director Jolie's love and accurate understanding and expression of the Mexican artist and her creation, as well as a kind of respect for the rebirth of Nirvana.
In the end, Frida chose cremation, do you know why? Because, she said, she had been lying in bed for too long - cremation may have symbolized a sublimation for her, a kind of firework-like blooming here, but this time, she hoped that she was not lying. She wants such a death to be happy, and she doesn't want an afterlife.
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