The most shocking movie I've ever seen.
The heroine is not afraid of anything. What kind of soul is in her body? I can't help but ask, is she still human? She's a superhero, isn't she? ! Is her mental quality what ordinary people can do?
She shuttles among the group of people, her eyes are evenly cast on everyone, she is herself, no social identity solidifies her image, although each one is enough to render, but all the complex identities, on the contrary, make the audience discover Elle.
She is not fixed by any kind of identity, what the audience sees is only Elle, not any kind of identity, image. More importantly, from her point of view, she looks at everyone calmly and rationally, travels through them, keeps herself, but not indifference to keep a distance. This balance is completely instinctive to her, and a superpower that is too powerful to doubt. .
During the viewing process, I clearly felt that I was not in the same dimension as her emotionally. Titled Elle, Beauvoir's Second Sex. okay.
In fact, many of her behaviors, from my point of view, do not understand. She wants to get rid of the person who violated her, but she also wants to face this person, why? What is her purpose?
The existence of her father is the devil that has always surrounded her, and she has to struggle to establish a normal life, and her life has always been accompanied by the "purging" instinct. The demise of her mother and father took her purges one step further. Finally got the courage to face the police. (Is that right?)
A few details:
1. She left her ex-husband because he beat her. Although they both want the marriage to last, the bottom line cannot be violated.
2. Her Christmas dinner is full of monsters and monsters
3. She is multi-threaded. Not affected by anything else.
4. She agreed to the neighbor's invitation. The first time she took her son to the neighbor's house was actually an attempt. Unfortunately, her son was drunk.
5. The neighbor woman actually thanked her. Probably when she said it, she didn't know that this was ironic and shameful to the heroine, but how could she care? (or just my guess).
6. Her presence of the "son" of her son is enough to demonstrate her strong understanding of inclusion. She is sober, she understands, but she is not addicted or coerced, she firmly maintains her position and never retreats.
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