Her performance was brilliant, um, and the male lead.
I don't know what the director meant by making Camille a cleaner and Frank a cook.
There is only one reason. It really is a movie. A film made for Paris.
The romance of cleaners and cooks can only be found in Paris.
We kiss, we go to bed, but we don't love each other. It is also a confession to the one you love. Camille said seriously. It may also be said casually. And this, only in Paris.
Frank's erosion after work is just to get rid of the repression of work. His tenderness was hidden behind roughness. He is implicitly saying that not all cooks are rough, and this is only in Paris.
Parisians are also reserved. Love without criticism. Unlike the East, it is subtle.
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