Desire + Sin = ?

Americo 2022-04-21 09:02:35

Chinese culture is extensive and profound, and the translators are really good. After searching the Internet, I found out that the poem "a tree of pear blossoms presses a begonia" was used by Su Shi to ridicule Zhang Xian's "old cow eats tender grass". The word "press" is really God...

Personally, I think this uncle is too greasy, and he must have some psychological problems, right? He keeps the straps of his ex-girlfriend's underwear all the time? ? ? I hate Lolita very much. If I still have a trace of sympathy for the uncle, I can see that I only hate Lolita in the later period. From the very beginning, she was only looking for stimulation, financial support, and someone who would accommodate her. Even if she paid her true feelings, she would have long been covered by her selfishness and ugliness, and even only existed when she was venting her lust.

Later, when she tried to increase her pocket money and directly "seduced" the uncle, my disdain for her could be said to have reached a new height, because she knew that this man had fallen so deeply into her that she couldn't extricate herself, how could her body and mind be controlled? So she has already started to take advantage of the uncle's feelings, and the money she has saved is used to escape, she is tired of playing.

In the scene of the loud quarrel on a rainy day, Lolita said that the uncle murdered her mother, but why is she not the murderer? If it wasn't for her hints everywhere, where would the back story happen? At least when the uncle was just infatuated with her, he still tried to respect the difference between men and women. It was Lolita who took the initiative step by step, and she actually talked to the uncle on the night she learned of her mother's death...? ? ? (Also "We were very gentle that night."???)

In the movie, I have never understood Quilty very well, and every time I take pictures of him, it is very suspenseful and terrifying. There is also the scene of the fight between the uncle and Quilty. I don’t know if the director made this scene for a deep meaning or to express something, but I searched the Internet and few people analyzed this. I went to the novel and found that the novel contained When the uncle and Quilty were fighting, he couldn't tell which one was him, because when he found out about what Quilty had done with the heroine, on the one hand, he hated this bastard and just wanted to kill him, on the other hand, he finally Realizing again that what he was doing was indistinguishable from Quilty. The pain of Lolita's death in childbirth and the guilt of this relationship are constantly entangled in his heart. He is Quilty, and Quilty is him. He can only explode his inner struggle on killing, so when he shoots, it is also I want to "kill" the sin in my heart, thinking that I can talk about it for comfort.

But I have to sigh for Uncle's feelings. Even though Lolita was so filthy and vulgar, he still loved her so much, even if after so many years Lolita was finally willing to contact him just for the money. Everything Lolita said to him in that little house was so hypocritical that it made me feel absolutely sick.

"Don't touch me, if you touch me I will die."

"I looked at her and looked and looked. I knew, as clearly as I knew I was going to die, that I loved her so much more than anything I'd seen or imagined on earth. She Used to be a whore, now she's like a dead leaf, pale, bloated, vulgar, pregnant with another man's child. But I love her, this Lolita, she can fade, she can wither, I don't care, but I just want Seeing her, all kinds of tenderness flooded into my heart."

"The light of my life, the fire of desire, my sin, my soul."

But this desire ended in tragedy.

Loving someone can really humble you to the dust.

But what if the flowers bloom? Lonely fragrance has no owner.

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Extended Reading

Lolita quotes

  • Humbert: From here to that old car you know so well is a stretch of twenty-five paces. Make those twenty-five steps. With me. Now.

    Lolita: You're saying you'll give us the money if I go to a motel with you?

    Humbert: No, no, no. I mean leave here now, and come live with me. And die with me, and everything with me.

    Lolita: You're crazy.

  • Humbert: What are you eating?

    Lolita: It's called a jawbreaker. It's supposed to break your jaw. Want one?