Lo

Colt 2022-04-23 07:02:40

Tragedy comes from desire. In the novel, Lo's mother once described her daughter as provocative, noisy, trouble-seeking, suspicious, impatient, angry, inquisitive, listless, and restless. Obedient and stubborn. When I first saw it, I was blindly confused by this "little goblin", and all I saw was the innocence and beauty exuded by her age, but when I looked again, I could feel the madness of this girl, and the innocence as described by her mother. One does not manifest. Her incest with her so-called father, while seducing him to get rid of him, drags this man who has always been restrained into the abyss of endless sin. Love stems from desire, and sin also stems from desire, which leads to the bitter fruit of tragedy, and the eater will never be saved.

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Extended Reading
  • Myles 2021-12-22 08:01:32

    He said you don't touch me, or I will die. I only remembered this line after reading it, but they accurately hit my fascinating tears.

  • Mackenzie 2021-12-22 08:01:32

    Compared with the Kubrick version (1962), there are more colors. Jeremy Irons’s delicate and bold performance makes his contradictory heart believable; Dominic Swann has the stupid appearance of an American precocious girl on her face, but unexpectedly makes her sexy look amiable. The first half is lively and vivid, and the second half is affectionate and sad. It's rare that a movie like this "injures the morals" will be so moving.

Lolita quotes

  • Miss Pratt: I know you have accepted a post at Beardsley College, and I know that there, academics are first, last, and always. Well, that's not us, Mister Humper. Here at Beardsley Prep... what we stress are the three Ds. Dramatics, Dancing, and Dating.

  • Humbert: I was not quite prepared for the reality of my dual role. On the one hand, the willing corruptor of an innocent, and on the other, Humbert the happy housewife.