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Everett 2022-11-28 23:45:42

I like this movie mainly because the heroine feels self-pity and self-love like Jane Eyre. And the life behind it, it's so thrilling!

In British movies, the male protagonist is unbelievably handsome. The heroine's appearance is not only ordinary, it can even be described in a bad way, but the story often makes people feel that the hero loves his daughter from the excavation of the heroine's character and morality. The reason for the protagonist.

While men are all sensory creatures, that's often not the case in British films. They only love the virtue (or money) of a woman.

Compared with the other two young girls who are young and beautiful, but not very stable, I personally think that ANNE still has an advantage. At least she can endure and understand the general situation. Although young but actually experienced the vicissitudes of life of the male protagonist, from his personality and experience, in fact, he has no choice. Young and beautiful WITH general knowledge, willing to pay, he understands what he wants, they are very divided into who is suitable for a girlfriend and what is suitable for a wife. Coupled with the feeling of first love when the two were young. It's easy for the male protagonist to discover that forbearance, the Cangbai heroine is what she wants.

Love, first of all, comes from the affirmation of each other's character and morality. Without this, it may not be possible to talk about it.

Watching this movie is like reading a novel. It is very suitable for watching alone at night, watching those people's forbearance and turbulent thoughts.

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Extended Reading

Persuasion quotes

  • Lady Russell: Anne! Who is Admiral Croft? And why does he cause you to be out of countenance so?... Anne.

    Anne Elliot: Admiral Croft's wife is... is...

    Lady Russell: Mrs. Croft.

    Anne Elliot: Indeed. And Mrs. Croft is the sister of Captain... Frederick Wentworth.

    Lady Russell: Wentworth? I see. I see.

    Anne Elliot: To think that soon he may be walking through this house.

    Lady Russell: Anne, you know that your father thought it a most unsuitable match. He would never have countenanced an alliance he deemed so degrading.

    Anne Elliot: He was not alone, as I recall.

    Lady Russell: My dear, to become engaged at 19, in the middle of a war, to a young naval officer who had no fortune and no expectations. You would indeed have been throwing yourself away. And I should have been failing in my duty as your godmother if I did not counsel against it. You were young, and it was entirely prudent to break off the understanding.

  • Sir Walter Elliot: Come, come, Anne! We must not be late. You cannot have forgotten we have an invitation from Lady Dalrymple.

    Anne Elliot: I regret I am already engaged to spend the evening with an old school-friend.

    Elizabeth Elliot: Not that sickly old widow in Westgate-buildings?

    Anne Elliot: Mrs Smith. Yes.

    Sir Walter Elliot: Smith? Westgate building?

    Mrs. Clay: Excuse me.

    Sir Walter Elliot: And who, pray, is Mrs Smith? One of the five thousand Smiths that are everywhere to be met with? Upon my word, Miss Anne Elliot, you have the most extraordinary taste. To place such a person ahead of your own family connections among the nobility of England and Ireland. Mrs Smith!

    Anne Elliot: Perhaps she is not the only poor widow in Bath with little to live on and no surname of dignity. Good evening.