a disliked movie

Thelma 2022-04-23 07:03:35

I admit that this movie has a point of view that I agree with, why can't I watch a movie I don't like?
OK, I'm done. Still don't like it.
Not because of the heroine, in fact I quite like her. When watching "Avengers 2", I suddenly found that this witch looks very good, and the vampire-style makeup can't hide her true color. Checked her video, this one seems to be doing well for her. After watching this film, at least it lived up to my expectations. A good actress can always let you see her true color, attractive true color, and she did it, or should say she has it, she has it.
One of the reasons I don't like it is the male protagonist, such as a fake bug. Doing age addition and subtraction is the only moment I like him, but this is probably the only moment he turns into a butterfly. In layman's terms, this product has been pondered in bits and pieces, and it is a coward after all. Everything is fine, but I can't face the bad. I'd rather be dragged to bed by the old ladies than start life with a little beautiful girl. Resist the temptation or the fear of temptation? Not to mention any liberal arts, this is about the general problem. Good is bad, bad is good.
Another reason to dislike is the director. Maybe the screenwriter just wanted to say that ordinary people have good moments too, please, can the director choose an ordinary girl? Or at least the male protagonist should be more melancholy and sensitive, with a little more talent wrapped up? The talented and beautiful woman is tired of looking at it. Is it disgusting to be a bedbug and beautiful woman? The director's psychology is a bit dark, do you want to destroy something beautiful, and then educate the world? The moment the bedbugs dare not roll the sheets, the movie is over. When the little beautiful girl nibbled on a playboy—it was true that she didn’t see it as a playboy—at that moment, what kind of growth did the director want to talk about?
The last reason to dislike is the ending. This guy's comfortable love ending is considered literature, but life is a cocoon? Just saved a young man who committed suicide, using everything as a bait, and then buried himself in a mediocre and uninteresting life - the director deliberately wanted to make it interesting. If you can't turn into a butterfly yourself, you just want to stay in a cocoon and don't coax others into turning into a butterfly. Is it a beautiful moment?
I can't like such a film, I can only count it as leaving a label in my memory to let me know why I don't like it.
However, I may never be able to finish a book or movie about vampires.

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Extended Reading

Liberal Arts quotes

  • Jesse Fisher: I think one of the things I loved the most about being here was the feeling that anything was possible. It's just infinite choices ahead of you. You'd get out of school, and anything could happen. And then you do get out, and... life happens, you know'? Decisions get made. And then all those many choices you had in front of you are no longer really there. At a certain point, you just got to go, "Oh, I guess this is new its going down." And there's just something a little depressing about that.

  • Nat: Is your name... Ethan?

    Jesse Fisher: No, why?

    Nat: You look like an Ethan to me.

    Jesse Fisher: My name's not Ethan.

    Nat: How cool would that be, if that was your name and I just, like, knew it?

    [Jesse shrugs]

    Nat: Are you a student here?

    Jesse Fisher: Uh, no, but thank you for thinking that. You?

    Nat: Nah, man. Just here visiting a buddy of mine. It's not a bad place to kill a little time, huh? I'm Nat.

    Jesse Fisher: I'm Jesse.

    Nat: Do you hear that music, Ethan?