2. After a while, Frances and her boyfriend say: No, I can't move Come and live with you, I live with Sophie, I can't leave her alone.
Then she happily answered a call from Sophie and broke up with her boyfriend...
3. After a few scenes, Sophie told Frances on the subway that she wanted to move to live with Lisa: I love that street so much, I I've always wanted to live there. But it's okay if you don't want to move.
Frances: But I can't pay the rent there...and I could have moved in with an ex...
but Sophie moved out. And also hooked up with a boyfriend at Goldman Sachs.
The show started off pretty confusing. A silly girl gets dizzy with a thin friendship and breaks up with a man because of it.
After that, Frances began to live around, and the plot continued to advance in the various place names that appeared on the screen. Along the way, financial constraints and job frustration. If this book is put into contemporary China, it will definitely be a sentimental and unbearable "Country Girl Lost in Shanghai" or something like that. Even if the ending of the protagonist improves, it will be a show of swallowing up, fighting hard, and full of blood and tears.
But fortunately this is New York, the protagonist will not starve to death if he doesn't work hard. He pretends to have a bright future and refuses the office position given by the small boss. He returns home halfway and goes to France, (although he eventually goes bankrupt and becomes a The school dormitory, living in the dormitory.) At the same time, Sophie, and her boyfriend in Japan, co-authored a blog with glossy photos, showing that everything is orderly and interesting.
The climax is Frances bumping into Sophie and her boyfriend (who Frances needs to serve) while working as a receptionist at school. Sophie is drunk and openly quarrels with her fiancé. It turns out that the brilliance is just brilliance, and the sadness is hidden in it.
At night, the two huddled together in the school's small dormitory, comforting each other and complaining to each other. Sophie suddenly said: Actually, I always felt that we were in a competitive relationship.
Early in the morning, Sophie left a note and hurried away. Back to his metropolis, back to his fiancé, whom he didn't feel very attached to.
In the end, the director kindly gave this silly girl a decent ending. Back in New York, faced reality, took over the office job, and finally had a place to live.
In the movie, Sophie and Frances' friendship is really amazing (it's not as bad as I said at the beginning). But compared to Frances, Sophie is a mature urbanite, she has more means of making a living and living arrangements. Bohemian, bohemian Frances is a good friend to her, but more of a temporary port. (Crowded in a small bed at night, saying that he hated life in Japan and everything now, he went straight to the big city in the early morning.) Even, in the eyes of Sophie, a city dweller, Frances and her were in a relationship with her boyfriend, There is competition in life.
Frances' character has a lot of naive, childlike elements. With a sturdy figure, clumsy conversation, and a big grin all day long, he has no hesitation and no fear, "What? If you can't dance, you can only sit in the office. My mother doesn't do it. There is a better place for my mother, and my mother is not uncommon." ( Although money can hit her). It can only be said that the director is very kind and gave the story a beautiful direction. If you put aside the beautiful and sexy face, the kind boss and the friends around, this will definitely be an urban tragedy...
So Chinese Wen Qing don't say anything romantic about this film, I really like this feeling. Category. . . . If you stay in Shanghai, you can't afford to rent a house, you don't have a job, and no one takes care of you, what do you do! ~hum~
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