There are two most impressive scenes: one is Rimbaud twisting his butterfly bone with his back to the camera, and using it to open the bottle cap, how slender and young body bones can be displayed, how beautiful it is the years; second, at the end of the film, Verlaine saw Rimbaud kissing his palm in a hallucination... I know this is not a simple love story, but I still burst into tears with heartache, and that incomparable smile is so beautiful that the face is deep It deeply shocked me. The most cruel thing was that there was a copy of "Esquire" with a leo cover on the bed. The traces left by the years really made me unable to bear to look directly.
It's not that the current leo is not good. He is walking steadily on the road he wants. The future must be promising, but the most touching thing for him is the marginal boy back then.
In fact, I have never been able to understand this kind of film, the poet and so on are not understandable to a mediocre person like me, but when I watch it, I still laugh arrogantly with him, and I also worry when I am sad. But for me it's still a boring movie, just watching it will make me not know what to think for a long time and then it will make me lose interest in watching other movies. That's what I thought when I saw the first half of the film, but Rimbaud, or rather the existence of leo, changed the position of this film in my heart.
I shouldn't be looking at it now, this comparison is watching beauty pass by, a real tragedy that can't be changed.
He made a huge change to get rid of the title of youth idol brought by the big ship. Leo was a genius back then. I watched him imitate dogs, sheep and bitch, and I was very happy. He was so beautiful. Such existence is a great thing for Sundance; now Leo is a good actor, he used Ten years of disfigurement to show people that he is indeed a powerhouse, and many years later he may be walking on the red carpet with ease leading to a lifetime achievement award.
He could happily say to the bright side of the iron, "I know I'm not as good-looking as before, but that's a good thing," and I can only miss the dazzlingly beautiful boy back then.
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