The death of the band's lead singer: emotional fragility

Ludwig 2022-04-22 07:01:39

This movie looks depressing. Students who want to watch can take a quick look, it seems to be more popular recently.

I originally thought that the biography of the band's lead singer would write a lot about music (by the way, "Once"). But a lot of this film is about marriage and family love.

Ever since Kurt Cobain, I have felt that the suicide of the lead singer will be the most brilliant time for a band, because the living people open their mouths and no one listens and the dead are always thought-provoking, and Ian's death is not worth it or to say Kind of baffling. However, this may also be the case with people committing suicide. They may have been talking and laughing in the first two days, but after a while, they will never have a chance to figure it out.

In my eyes, premature marriage and children are the trigger for tragedy. Ian got married on the spur of the moment and then gave birth to a daughter on impulse, so that when choosing marriage or love, Ian painfully abstained from voting. Ian is deeply in love with his wife and lover, but the UK is monogamous, so he has to make a choice. If Ian hadn't been married, he wouldn't have had children later. If he hadn't had children, he wouldn't have been under pressure from the family. If there wasn't family pressure, maybe he wouldn't have committed suicide...

Some people say that there is no eternal love, because love will sublimate. And when new love emerges after the sublimation of love, what should you do?

Of course, don't commit suicide anyway.

View more about Control reviews

Extended Reading

Control quotes

  • Ian Curtis: So this is permanence; love-shattered pride. What once was innocence, has turned on its side.

  • Ian Curtis: When you look at your life, in a strange new room, maybe drowning soon, is this the start of it all?

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