The loneliest, the best will end the same

Athena 2022-04-19 09:02:30

In fact, everyone is constantly thinking a lot every day, and there will be all kinds of different ideas.

I like the dance part the most, the music and dance are so beautiful, it touches me very much, because this is the most beautiful love process and result I can think of, I can't help crying, because everything that is too beautiful and too good will come to an end, it It may really exist at a certain point in life (whether it is real or imagined), but because it is fleeting, you feel that it is really unreal, but it does exist.

Just like when I finished reading a novel, I found that many of the characters in it are several personalities separated from the author himself, while others are the people he really met in his life or his imagination of these people.

Everyone is unique, and even if you're not a solitary otaku like the protagonist, you're a person with your own independent ideas and will always be surrounded by long-term, temporary or occasional loneliness. People have a sense of loneliness, which should be a kind of self-recognition of people as independent individuals.

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Extended Reading
  • Pearlie 2022-01-05 08:01:59

    Seeing Frederick’s "A Lone Monk by the Sea" hanging in the living room of Jake's house, the sea fog in the painting turned into heavy snow in the film. Zong Baihua quoted this painting in "A Walk in Aesthetics" to explain that both Western painters and Chinese painters have a love for endless space, and what he said in Chinese painting "sees the infinity in the finite, and returns to the finite in the infinite". With universal applicability, what is the difference between Wang Wei's "Thousands of miles from the pillow, and the rooms from the window" is different from the snow in Jake's heart.

  • Nellie 2022-03-26 09:01:09

    How to eliminate the "Kurishov effect" that appeared at the beginning of the film? For Kaufman, the answer is that as a virtual brain-image, the non-existence of the other is discovered in the encounter of the other, thereby invalidating the front/reverse fight of the subject-object dichotomy, just like the rotation seen by the heroine in the basement The washing machine, the main body moves towards the "object", but it is finally incorporated into another main body in a tree-like manner. In "I Want to End It All", only the suffocating interior view of the car is a real physical space, as brain or as a coffin. It's still, or unaware of its movement except for the snowflakes drifting backwards in the foreground, like the backdrop of a classic Hollywood car perspective. The space outside the car is a black hole of memory that is repeatedly inhaled and controlled by the virtual. With the invasion of the "subject", the potential is materialized in the way of being given direction, and finally accumulates the intensity, until the final locked door - unable to return physical brain. In this way, "I" with some American-style suspense shells can be first understood as Godard's self-talk, but finally presented as a musical version of "Wild Strawberry."

I'm Thinking of Ending Things quotes

  • Mother: I'm saying, take the darn nightgown to the basement. Live dangerously!

  • Young Woman: Other animals live in the present. Humans cannot, so they invented hope.