If one hundred years pass

Rudy 2022-10-24 23:13:39

The film is derived from real oil paintings. I knew that painting a long time ago. The cute black girl and the dignified and elegant white girl. The friendship between the two looks very good. The themes of this play are slavery, racial discrimination, and the fate of women. The first two points are neither salty nor indifferent, so I will focus on the last point. Heroine: A woman is a man's asset. No matter how much wealth a woman has, she must marry, right? What does she count without a husband? Male protagonist: Unless she has an equal marriage, true equality, marry someone who respects her. This is the dialogue between the heroine and the heroine by the river. At that time, whether in Europe or Asia, women were just appendages of men, not independent individuals. In fact, this is not the case in this society. Most people still feel that it is a sin to be single and not to marry, and it is unfilial for DINK to have no offspring. Men and women are weird if they don't get married. Secular vision is awesome. If one hundred years pass, and people in the future look back at the present, will they think that our age is backward? I think so.

View more about Belle reviews

Extended Reading

Belle quotes

  • John Davinier: Should not any lady be flattered to be such a subject?

    Dido Elizabeth Belle: How should any male know the ways of a lady when he has not even mastered the ways of a gentlemen?

    John Davinier: Quite. Though one should be forgiven for thinking he is in the presence of a lady, when she is in fact still a juvenile.

  • John Davinier: Permit me to ask, why do you not dine with your family ever?

    Dido Elizabeth Belle: That is not correct.

    John Davinier: Forgive me, but twice now I have seen you separated from the gathering. I am confounded.

    Dido Elizabeth Belle: And well you might be when the son of clergy is permitted to the table before a lady of the house.

    John Davinier: Is that a reminder of my place?

    Dido Elizabeth Belle: No. It's a statement of mine.