It's been a long time since I watched biopics. In the postgraduate period, I started watching works related to women, and unknowingly, I was very interested in such works. Tonight Kim Soo said she wanted to see this movie before, so I wanted to see it too.
Compared with the recently watched "The Flower Blooms and the Moon Is Full", this film is serious and realistic, without the halo of the protagonist, the male protagonist of Mary Sue, and no one to help.
From the beginning, the heroine took the suffragette's words as a story, to denying herself a suffragette in prison, and then firmly admitting that she was a suffragette, and finally fought for it.
I originally thought the film would talk about how the heroine awakens step by step, becomes the leader of the women's movement, and finally leads everyone to a staged victory. But I didn't expect that the death of Emily Davidson on the racetrack was the end. This movie is about the "first blood" in this battle. For this first drop, they have paid a lot.
The heroine is not a leader, but a participant and bystander of the women's movement. She represents thousands of women fighting for their rights. They have all experienced broken families, gossip, men's contempt and even women's exclusion. , government crackdowns, police detentions...
It is precisely because of these that they chose to be radical, violent, and bloodshed. "Only war will make those men care," and only death will be noticeable. So when the lady on the racecourse walked in resolutely, how determinedly she chose to call the world's attention with her life under the world's camera! Perhaps this great sport requires bloodshed and sacrifice to make a big step forward.
Never underestimate women, never know how wise, courageous, and courageous they are. They, like them.
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