A modern version of Gone with the Wind. The beautiful African savannah, rainy season, forest, accompanied by melodious music, tells the love and hatred of a woman and this land. From understanding to management, from possession to loss, from hope to despair. . . . . . The ups and downs are like natural weather, force majeure. The seemingly cruel experience is actually intriguing. "When I'm sure I can't take it any longer, I'll hold on for a little longer, and then I know that I can bear anything." Only then can you remove the disguise, understand the impermanence of the world, and face your true self. "Out of Africa" means stepping out of confusion and looking for the beginning of the road to rebirth, and pain is the key to opening this door. At the beginning of the film, she is a baroness with ambitions and dreams, and she sets foot on this seemingly barren and barren land full of rich luggage; at the end of the film, she is Karen who returns empty-handed and the land of Africa uses her own way. He has given her a treasure that some people may not be able to reach in their entire lives: we have always been just passing through this journey of life, no one can really take anything away, just walk lightly and experience it with your heart.
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Out of Africa reviews