I understand her very well

Dustin 2022-04-19 09:02:44

I saw it at the Beijing Film Festival. It was a huge screen. It was great.

Very strong British style, the seaside country grass flowers are beautiful and comfortable to look at.

In fact, I really like this story, and I can understand the love and resistance of the girl played by Ronan.

There are a lot of funny places in the front of the film, the awkward wedding night for the two of them, restrained and nervous. But it is also interspersed with those best love times, the so-called love at first sight, the light in the eyes. In order to see the roads you walked with the map, the seven miles, the joy and excitement on your face. Those hands that lightly put on a dress for your mother, those words of encouragement. That little dispute with your parents at the dinner table is just for you. The biggest dream is that the quartet can perform independently, and for you, for you. How can you say she doesn't love it?

In fact, I can understand Ronan's flor very well, and I can especially understand the words she said that ed can find another person to meet his physiological needs. Maybe in the eyes of boys, it is an insult, a kind of contempt? But isn't that bad? She was just afraid, she was resisting, she tried hard to learn but couldn't do it! Shouldn't loving her tolerate these? Isn't it important for two people to be together emotionally? Isn't that the kind of firm belief that you want to spend the rest of your life together? It is okay to have sex without love, but not to have love without sex? So, in the eyes of the world, physiology is still greater than emotion? Of course, this may also be a problem that the director and screenwriter want to discuss. There was a quarrel at the seaside, ed's words were unpredictable, and words like you like a bitch really hurt people. It was really gentle that she didn't give him a slap. At first, she thought she just walked away, but in the end she found out that she had kept him, but ed was stubborn and didn't look back. Kind of sad. So in the end, ed really regretted it. The words he said to his sisters after returning home were especially like a child who lost his temper. Maybe he really wasn't mature enough.

flor is very cool, gentle and cute, with ideas and persistence, and the most important thing is beauty. He never hesitates to praise the person he likes, not only to him but also to his family. When he picks up the violin, he is like a queen, the backbone of the quartet, and the protagonist who can shine. In this relationship, she gave, she loved, and she gave the best of everything. So the old ed has been regretting it, and he has been saying she loved him when he finally told the story.

But what I don't quite understand about this ending is what does it mean for flor to marry a cellist and have such a happy family? Does it mean that she overcame her own difficulties in the end, but ed didn't wait? In the front of the movie, is the cellist wanting to date her and the conversation with the elder before marriage also a foreshadowing? After breaking up with ed, I devoted myself to my career and then got married casually? Ah, actually, I really want to know the story of this section, and I want to see the heroine's perspective, but there may be no need to put it in the movie. It is also left to the audience to guess, everyone's Hamlet. But I think it would be cooler if she was single all her life.

In the end, I want to show off Poronan's acting skills. It really shines. What is acting? Is it the same person who forced Timmy to be the one in the coldness and Miss Bird? Yes it is her. The plasticity is too strong, and she will definitely build a golden statue to go home.

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Extended Reading

On Chesil Beach quotes

  • Florence Ponting: [Reading love, sex and marriage to Ruth] Women are like doorways. Men can enter though them.

  • Florence Ponting: Edward, I want to make you happy. But I think I'm always a disappointment. You're always advancing, I'm always backing away, and we can't talk about it. We can never just be happy... or just be. You're always demanding something more and I'm useless at... And you go silent and unhappy and it's all my fault. And when I do... I mean when I say yes to something, even if I don't really want to, I know there'll be another thing that I'm expected to do. I'm no good at these demands.