Looking through the time, it turned out to be this movie I watched in September last year, just after the trial period. Speaking of the probationary period, I have to talk about the company I am currently working for. The job I joined in March turned out to be a regular at the end of June. I didn’t expect the boss to be very willful. After reading the regular report, he suddenly proposed an “excessive” request for data endorsement. To say it is too much is because no one in the data department in the company knows how to "endorsement", and no one dares to ask "what endorsement is required" or the like. This will drag me on for 3 months in vain, which is equivalent to a 3-month salary cut in disguised form. After 6 months, I didn’t even mention the endorsement, and it naturally turned positive. I don't know if this mood at that time affected the feeling of watching this movie, I always felt that I didn't appreciate it much.
One of the leading actors is Ingrid Bergman and the other is Parker. It's not a little disappointment. Parker's image is very weak and "mother"; while Bergman's role is very man and very rational. They don't match very well in appearance, but they just fell in love, a great love. I can't guess what a great love is based on. Maybe it's the appearance of love at first sight that is enough to make Bergman have an "inexplicable" love for Parker. Absolute trust, believing that he is not a criminal, and helping him find out the truth of the matter. At the end of the story, the truth finally came out. They kissed deeply at the train station and parted with the affectionate and envious ticket checking film of the mandarin ducks, but they didn't expect them to both enter the station! In addition, the big-eyed party designed by Dali and the scene where Parker's younger brother died in a slide accident when he was a child were also impressive. The young Parker sitting at the top of the slide looked a bit like a fake doll.
Parker, who plays Dr. Edward, likes to wrap his arms around Bergman, and then bury his head obliquely into his arms. That action looks very motherly. In the whole movie, Dr. Edward is not likable, and Parker's performance is also very superficial.
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