Kristin Scott Thomas has not changed much. She had a face of vicissitudes when she was young, but she was not haggard when she was middle-aged. Her acting skills were still so good. As soon as she appeared, the whole scene was about her. In addition to the heroine's pale blond hair, it can also attract some attention.
In the play, two old actors play a couple who are not good-looking but divorced, a desolate aristocrat, living in a large manor. Hypocrisy and pretentiousness are especially enjoyable. In my imagination, the lives of British people in the 1930s and 1940s can be put on the stage at any time.
Except for the two old acting skills, as well as the heroine's beauty, music and scenery, nothing else works. I really don't understand what story this movie is going to tell. The rich second generation falls in love with a young and pretty widow, the two quickly divorced, the aristocratic aristocrat is unsurprisingly hypocritical and poor, and the playboy is an unreliable silver wax gun head, waiting for the word The old girl in the middle of the school is babbling or gossiping, and the ex-aristocratic son who has experienced the baptism of war is living his life full of heart and soul. . .
It doesn't work, it doesn't work, it's too cliché, it's too DRAMA, it's not very moving.
The heroine is really beautiful, just like the vixen in my mind.
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