Humbert's first love died at the age of fourteen, and his love also stayed at the age of fourteen.
He loves a fourteen-year-old girl who is as fragile as glass, as beautiful as the sun, as innocent as a clear spring, and as light as a feather.
Lolita has the innocence of fourteen years old, her bright eyes and bright smile make the whole world come alive. She's never pretentious, and even has an insight beyond fourteen, which, of course, is limited to relationships between men and women.
Humbert covets all her beauty, his eyes follow her every move, she lies on the grass reading, she rummages through the refrigerator for ice cream, she lazily eats chewing gum, she sits on top of him recklessly, even, The touch and teasing she seemed to understand—everything made his heart sway.
Humbert coveted all the good in her, even willing to marry her mother Charlotte, and then run away from bed every night. He did all this just to be closer and closer to her.
Charlotte finds the record of his love, she asks angrily. Humbert was still clumsily weaving lies. He poured two glasses of wine and was about to drink it with Charlotte. Suddenly, she turned around and Charlotte was no longer in the chair. How fragile life is, she was sitting in a chair just now, and he was pouring her wine just now, and in a flash, she had rushed out of the house angrily and was hit by a car on the street.
Charlotte was dead, and Humbert felt a little guilty, but only a little. He can love his beloved Lolita without restraint!
Humbert coveted all her goodness and all her indulgences, and he wasn't even her first man. However, his love is to be strong enough to be his own, strong enough to let her escape.
Clare Kunning is a playwright who also likes young girls. Like Humbert, he likes young girls because of their primitive love, the kind that sees him getting old but can't stop it, and can only confirm his strength through young women. Humbert's possession can still be called "love", while Klarkunning's possession is only possession, only possession.
He deliberately followed Humbert and Lolita. When Lolita was suffocated by Humbert's love and wanted to escape, he took her away like a tornado, leaving only the shock for poor Humbert.
Lolita is gone! Humbert's world collapsed with it. He was crazy, desperate, and sad.
In this way, Humbert resumed his long journey. This time, Lolita's cheerful voice and young body were no longer by his side, and he wanted to find her again.
During the long journey, he began to suffer from missing, began to struggle with desire and morality, and also began to think heavily. He tortured himself in the depths of his soul again and again - he really regretted it!
When he found her again, saw her pregnant body, and saw her haggard and maturity polished by life, he really regretted it!
He really regretted it. This regret lasted until the last moment of his life. What made him sad was not that there was no Lolita by his side, but that "there was no her in the laughter" - it was he who brought her into such a life!
My love, I love you, I wanted to protect you instead of hurting you!
Lover, I love you, I originally hoped that my love could make you happier!
As a lover, he hurt her. As a father, what else could he do for her?
Humbert wanted to kill the man who had kidnapped and abandoned Lolita, "I deeply regret everything I did before, but I never regret what I did after this."
He really killed Clarquen Ning, the ugly naked body struggled, fought back, fled in a hurry, and finally lay on the bed with a little dignity. A large piece of blood stained the quilt, a large drop of blood was flowing quietly, and a blood bubble appeared on Klarkunning's mouth.
Humbert got his wish by killing Clare Kunin, and then he allowed himself to disappear from Lolita's life. It was the last thing he could do for her.
It's just that he didn't know that, in the end, Lolita, who he loved so much, also died in childbirth.
I think a lot about Lolita.
The movie is more about telling the story from a male point of view, in fact, from Lolita’s point of view, from a female point of view, what is she going to do throughout the course of this development? What can she do?
The loose social environment, the shadow of a single-parent family, and the mother who is not a good family woman, all give Lolita the possibility of indulgence. She is too young to face Humbert, Clare Kunning, or even the boys in the summer camp, she will not refuse. She welcomes every man with joy, but she still doesn't know that behind their deep love, there is a deep hurt. Girl, when will you learn to say no?
She had loved, hated, waited, sought, pursued, indulged, and fled in her short life, and now everything is at peace. She is still fourteen years old, but her eyes have seen too many stories, her body has experienced too much pain, and her heart is as old as a woman. Originally, her beauty could continue to bloom for many years.
A charming flower that blooms at the age of fourteen and withers at the age of fourteen.
Did Lolita really love Humbert? should be true.
Did Humbert really love Lolita? of course it's true.
It's just that they don't know that some loves can never be started.
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