Beauty is really a terrible thing. We can say that all good and beautiful things are beautiful, but can't we say that so-called evil things are also beautiful? As Yukio Mishima wrote at the beginning of "Confessions of a Mask". Wilde just fell in love with a beautiful evil that he couldn't get rid of, but as he said, we can't choose, this is fate, and we can't lie to fate, can we?
There is no regret in this kind of life. Wilde has everything that is envied by people, but he can't control himself. It's just that he didn't see who the person who loves him the most is. Maybe he did, but in the eyes of his lover , In addition to the person you love, who else can you tolerate? Robbie Ross' silent love is God's additional gift to Wilde and the most precious gift. May their souls understand each other's love and be immortal. He just fell in love with a child who will only live in the shadow of his father. Booth is constantly resisting his father, but on the contrary, he actually loves his father very much, and defeating his father is due to his inner fetters in trouble.
In the end, he frankly explained that his sexual orientation is also a precursor. It is exactly what Robbie said in the movie. Artists are children at heart, and the whole story runs through a fairy tale with deep meaning, and the metaphor is also quite accurate. .
The film repeatedly emphasizes ancient Greece, Platonic love, and links to the current danmei culture. I can't help but wonder if this is really the so-called unnaturalness?
We want to prove that human beings are superior. If there is no asexual love or same-sex love among animals, doesn't it mean that we are non-animal? Is a seemingly unethical act precisely where the proof lies in the proof that morality is an attribute peculiar to higher beings as human beings? Because of the opposite behavior, wouldn't there be moral constraints? Two seemingly contradictory things point to the same result.
We can't ignore this beauty, a suffocating, irresistible beauty, can't we?
To borrow a sentence from "Nancy's Love Story": This is human nature.
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