I didn't want to write it here...it's just that the word limit for short comments is not enough for me to write

Eloy 2022-04-19 09:02:22

The structure is very ordinary, first and then rising, and it is the same idea as movies such as Cinderella and college freshmen. The most popular should be the heroine of PL and the really handsome male lead...

However, the most characteristic is the "dorm manager", a typical comedy of institutionalization. Walking, talking, and clothing, the word "system" is written all over.

The idea of ​​the film should be friendship, rebelliousness, and sincerity: Although Polly behaves like an asshole, at least she is sincere, not as hypocritical as the header. Girls in teens will naturally not be too disgusted by such a superficially rebellious, practical vulnerable people. And later, during the fire, she didn't choose to pretend but really took her responsibility and woke everyone up; when she thought of drippy being trapped in the cold storage, what she did was to rush in without any risk of her own - it was all for a friend Uncompromising sincerity.

From rebellious to natural, one of Polly's transition points was in the barbershop. After tangled with the barber countless times, the comedy barber gave her a "natural hairstyle", leaving her with a "natural" mentality.

Another turning point came after the teacher talked to her. "There has never been anyone in our school who has appeared in Time Magazine, but what we want to teach our students is mutual assistance and sincerity" (I can't remember the original text, the general idea is this). The most important thing the teacher taught her was a word: sisterhood.

The last and most important change came when she found out that her mother had also been a student at the school and was the leader of the team - I think, this is in addition to making up for the rebellion she has brought since the loss of her mother at the age of 11. , and gave her a sense of mission: what she was about to accomplish was what her mother once did. ——appeared inconceivably, with four eyes facing each other, as if it were a predestined relationship.


As for the plot, I can only say that it is too Hollywood style. But when her transformation to nature showed up and the people in the honor court stood up to speak for her, I was once again thoroughly moved. The part that surprised me was that the arsonist was actually the header. (It can only be said that I am relatively simple... Most people should be able to think of it here)

However, where the plot is a little incomplete is the handling of the "ball game" (all I can say is a ball game...don't know what that ball is). In the entire film, before she leads the team to the finals, there are only two references to the sport: her competition with the header (or through a fight...), and her finding out that her mother is the leader of the original team. And, in the end, the handling of the winning method is comic again, it turns out that drippy can score goals like this... The only reason why she is the captain is: she inherited her mother's talent? ! In any case, the processing here is incomplete.
However, in any case, this film is still a good film, because it made me think about something...

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Extended Reading

Wild Child quotes

  • [Repeated line]

    Harriet: Me thinks.

    CharlotteJane: [Both, together] We think so, too.

  • Kate: [after looking at all of the bottles of water in Poppy's trunk] Erm... Why?

    Poppy: What? I might get thirsty!

    Kate: You know, in England, we have this amazing thing - it's called a tap.

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