If most of the female protagonists of campus youth films are not good enough (it is really not enough and not invisible by wearing glasses for no apparent reason), then it is always the IQ that has left the school ten streets or the kindness of Snow White. But Sierra Burgess is not: Although she has all A grades, but her overall resume is mediocre and has no specialties, she does not stand out. Even the counselor said that she applied to Stanford as a dream; although she loves to read, her father is a hundred times more literary than her; her mother taught her Understand that appearance and popularity are not the most important things, but the mother herself is outstanding and successful in her career; she is not good at sports and has never volunteered for community service and charity. She is really a loser as the movie's name says, not only In the eyes of classmates, it is also in her own heart-a person who does not subconsciously feel that she is a loser does not need to say affirmation in the mirror every day.
I don't want to defend her stabbing the second woman in the back, which is obviously hopelessly wrong. What I want to say is that the direction of the storyline has already paved the way for the inevitability of this event. If the female second character set in the front part of the movie has some shortcomings of meanness or ignorance, the latter half has been successfully transformed into a perfect character with silly white sweetness + stunning appearance. Then with this change, the only small sense of superiority in the GPA of the heroine at the beginning is also gone. Her sensitive and inferiority heart, when she said "please don't kiss him" to the second girl for the first time, begging, she had already expressed it vividly. This humble state of mind, when the second woman inadvertently praised the male lead in front of Sierra, it had become fear and helplessness with nowhere to rest. What prompted her to finally retaliate against the second girl, I believe it was not the anger that mistakenly thought that she was betrayed by her friends, but the despair of witnessing with my own eyes that the things that she feared and couldn't stop had finally come true. When she realized that the situation was irreversible, her expression was not happy, all I read was panic and at a loss. At that moment, if the heroine is more sensible and mature, she might quickly apologize to the second female and admit her mistake, but the heroine is just a big loser after all. After all, she has been immersed in ignorance and ridicule for many years. After all, she can only see the quarterback giving her ordinary The light brought by life, so she ran to the person she thought was the most important. It's like young girls in modern society, being led by social networks and social pressure to compete with other same-sex, just for the identity of the opposite sex. When she finally collapsed in front of her parents, what I saw was not the cry of a teenager, but the outbreak of the girl’s inner conflicts and struggles over the years. It was the first time in her life that she was severely slapped in the face by the cruel reality. pain.
If there was no mischief at the beginning of the female second day, then the quarterback (as he himself admitted) would not have noticed the heroine at all, and more importantly, the heroine would not have any illusions about being involved with the quarterback. It is not so much that the heroine plays the male lead round and round, I think it is better to say that the female lead's immature hands cannot let go. This mistake has become a real dream.
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