After watching "Home on the Ramp" and then watching Tully, it's too easy. Compared with the depressiveness of Japanese dramas, this movie is obviously a lot brighter. The relationship between mother Maro and her children is not tense (of course it is exhausting), and she is harmonious with her husband (although her husband has been absent for a long time - loves to play games - there are equivalents) to none)
The color of the movie is also pleasant. In the sunny room, the mother turned on the music, took out the brush, and gently brushed the son's body. The son snuggled up beside his mother with a look of enjoyment, a happy scene.
And her bear child actually only has her son Jonah, because her daughter is basically a better-behaved situation. In a special family situation, Jonah appears to be emotionally disturbed, screaming uncontrollably when he hears noises or acts out of routine.
What's really heartbreaking about the movie is the sacrifice women make for their families.
What Tully said to Marlowe as he was about to leave felt far-fetched. Is it really Marlow's dream to repeat the boring life? Was that warm bed, that creaking staircase, really the happiness Marlow wanted? Maybe it's just the comfort of a helpless life.
Marlow wanted that twenty-something face and body, dreamy and full of energy. She loves literature, can think, is learning Italian, has many boyfriends, eats, drinks and has fun, and is not afraid of the future and tomorrow, which is her lost youth and can never come back. Three children left her tits drooping, her ass sagging, and her body bloated with fat. She has greasy hair and is too lazy to wash her hair. The only pleasures of her day are eating junk food and watching pornographic reality shows. I thought, if life could be repeated, would she make a new choice? Her young partner looked at her fat and lazy body in shock. On the day Tully left, Marlow insisted on finding her old friend. She knew that her body could not take it any longer. She just wants to go back to her past memories.
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