Personally, I think this is Jolie's best work in the early days, except for "The Girl Who Moved the Soul." When I look at it, I always have an illusion. Is this Gia Carangi or Julie herself? Some temperaments are too similar.
She is rebellious and unruly, dares to love and hate, and at the same time is fragile and confused. She has a splendid and lonely short life like fireworks, like... like the degenerate version of James Dean in the fashion circle, too beautiful to die, too wild to live, this The words couldn't be more appropriate for Gia.
What is not mentioned in the film is that she was violated by an old lecherous demon when she was a child, which was the shadow of her whole life, and the broken family since childhood was the main cause of her character and sexual orientation. If it's just because of the divorce of the parents, that's not the case. It is worth mentioning that Mila Kunis's performance, although only for one minute, is unforgettable. When I was a child, I saw my parents quarrel and even make hands, and it was the same expression.
This girl lacks love, as Linda described: "She was just like a puppy, LOVE ME! LOVE ME! LOVE ME! " The agent who loves her gave her a promise of "you and me, together," but he could only watch her die. She is a seventeen-year-old child. She will still make trouble when her mother is leaving. When TJ leaves New York and Linda goes home, she will try her best to keep her. I heard an ironic reason: "I'm still a child and I need someone to take care of me!" Can't she take care of herself? No, she can live completely; she is just too lonely and wants someone to accompany her.
After reading related articles, I know that they used to be a good story, and I know that she is not the only one, so I can't get much moved by seeing the love line and age line that have been changed beyond recognition in the movie. My favorite scene in the emotional line is not the wild pas de deux, nor the fragrant love scene, but the part where Gia calls and apologizes at the drug rehab center. I can't tell, but I like it. The most cruel thing is that, in the end, she forced the sick body to send her diary to Linda, in the hope that she could learn all about Gia in the future. Linda completely forgave her and even planned their future early, but Gia even had one. Even a goodbye kiss can't be left to her, leaving Linda with a blank face.
Love failed to conquer heroin, but conscience did. In the face of Linda's pleading, she turned and left, and later entered the drug rehab center, not all because of her, but because she saw TJ's bloody hands. If this continues, how many more people will she hurt? Well, the body and the mind can no longer betray themselves to that demon. (That knife is often used by Gia for self-mutilation. TJ was slashed so badly by it. Fortunately, he was not infected. Did
Did Gia lose herself in the fashion circle of drunken money fans? Not at all, she never cared about fame and fortune. Although she has a lot, she feels that she has nothing, and everything she cares about has left her. The panic almost broke her down. In the entertainment industry, these people are fascinating to pursue fame and fortune. Doesn't she understand anything at a young age? She knows it all, and it's all written in her once upon a time.
A long, long time ago, there was a little blond girl who lived in a beautiful house.
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