Different from Disney's fairy tale style, the French version may be more Gothic. Whether it is the costumes or the setting, it can be said to be a completely different story of Beauty and the Beast. The setting is very different from the Disney version. There is no prince cursed by a witch, there is no rose gradually falling in the glass cover, and there is no castle furniture up and down the palace. It can be seen as a completely different story - the king has always been obsessed with hunting A golden doe, but she has never been able to get it, and left the queen in the cold. The queen and the king agreed to give birth to an offspring for the king, and the king gave up the doe to accompany her more. However, the king did not abide by the agreement. One day after the queen was pregnant, an arrow was finally shot into the heart of the doe. Suddenly the doe turned into a queen, naked and lying on the ground with an arrow in her heart. It turns out that the doe is a forest fairy, who can transform into a human figure to experience human love and meet the king. The god of the forest was furious because the king killed his daughter, and the wind and thunder turned the king into a beast. Only when another woman fell in love with the king could the curse be broken. The color matching has an ancient and gorgeous feeling like a slightly dry rose filter. The slightly Gothic story is equipped with Baroque style clothing. I guess the director must have referenced Boucher's color matching. The lens has a very beautiful oil painting texture. The original story happened. The location is also France, so naturally, Disney's early shots of Prince may be a little too clean and bright. The beast is also a dress-up play lover. It's really eye-catching to change Bell a day. In terms of actors, neither the male and female protagonists are outstanding. The heroine only looks good from certain angles, and some people think that the king is too old. Setting aside the setting aside, the kings of that era were all inclined to look like this, especially in France, who seemed to like this kind of appearance. I watched a lot of French films and the male protagonists had a similar temperament ("Black Swan" male protagonist) ). But the queen is so pretty! Really like a goddess! Two highlights of the plot: 1. Bell didn't come to fall in love. It wasn't in the fairy tale that two people fell in love after a snowball fight. Bell and the Beast made a deal: dance with the Beast, and the Beast asked him to go home to visit relatives. This is very different from the Disney version, where after Bell and the Beast are in love with each other, the Beast sends Bell home to visit family. The French version of Bell obviously made it clear that he was a hostage and a prisoner, so it was more rational to negotiate with the beast. Even when he was dancing and dancing, the Beast said "Will you fall in love with me?" and pulled Bell back to reality, and immediately pushed the Beast away to let him know that he was trading with him. 2. In the end, no love touched everything. Tears or kisses broke the curse setting. The beast woke up and asked carefully if it could develop further.
One more highlight: the ending is not that the prince and princess lived a happy life, they lost their identity as a prince and princess (this is indeed a Disney bug, will there be no other princes in France after the French prince is cursed? It will definitely not be after many years The prince is now.) Back in the pastoral garden to open a flower garden and a printing factory to write a fairy tale book, p9 is two people hugging a happy ending in the rose garden
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