I liked "The Unbearable Lightness of Life" so much that I watched "Prague Love".
The performance of this film is actually superficial, but on the other hand, the content of the book is so profound that it is impossible to explain it clearly. It is filmed like a revolving light, which can lead those who have read the book to relive it again. However, for those who haven't read the book, their understanding is very limited. It may only be on the surface that you cheated and I cheated, and vaguely watched the two of you have gone through life.
My biggest regret is the "I'm happy" at the end of the movie. Too many cuts, the last scene of their lives, Teresa feeling indebted to Thomas, putting on a little dress, their bar dancing, their loving embrace. Teresa has been plagued by insecurities all her life, dragging Thomas down and down, but by some miracle, Thomas himself has fulfilled his mission. He really proved the difference between love and sex, guarding Teresa like a baby that fate has drifted to him, returning to Teresa is all his emotional calling, he doesn't feel a loss; giving up his doctor job, happened to experience To get rid of the lightness of the mission; to leave everything and go to the countryside, because the country is in ruins, where can one find a place to live? Most people are the same as the pulmonary effusion. That's why he said that he was very happy.
And just when their conflict disappeared, when he carried her into the first room No. 6 to make out, they also came to the end.
In fact, my favorite in the book is Sabina. She is the kind of woman with great personality and ideas. She is also a woman with pain points. She will inevitably become the eternal goddess in Franz's heart. I also love Franz's story, Franz's death was ironic, rebellious, he had a kitsch unusual but died ironically. The movie weakens the plot of both of them. Talking Sabina unreasonably, just rebelling for the sake of rebelling, leaving for no reason.
The role of Sabina in the movie is not the image of the goddess in my heart. On the other hand, the roles of the male and female protagonists are really youthful and beautiful. I originally had a prejudice against Teresa, because she was a character who climbed up. She was born in ignorance, but she was unwilling to do so. She tried to grab Thomas, who also held a book, with a straw. Her choice was a bit broad and reckless. Books as the only way, like a life-saving straw, a person took the train to Prague. What I appreciate is her rebellion against feminism, and insisting on doing what she really wants to do: love, photography is just the way she is loved, there is no need to rise to the level of ideas, and there is no need to embrace work in order to emphasize independence and freedom .
Finally, I have to praise the charm of its lens and face and body. Like "The Lover," it's one of those beautifully erotic films I stumbled upon.
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