No-me-no-me

Flo 2022-01-15 08:03:05

Ich Ich Ich

Some of my own thoughts are put here completely because I can't write a short review.

In fact, when I saw it at the last moment, I still didn't fully understand why this movie was called Wuzhu's work. Later, after thinking about it, I understood it a little bit.

It is very long, three hours, seeing that the initial feelings at the end have almost dissipated, what is left in my mind is just the process of watching the movie.

Because I didn't watch the content at all, I took a blank canvas to watch this movie. I don't know whether Wuzhu refers to works without a master or works without his own opinion.

Perhaps it is the latter. Simply tracing photos is naturally a way of not being independent. There is truth and harmony behind the so-called not being independent.

Thinking about it this way, this work is closely related to the question of whether the art that people have been discussing is exporting values ​​and whether it is necessary to criticize a work with personal values.

It is difficult to criticize whether the socialist realism in the film is worthless, but the interesting point is that what the professor in Dresden taught him was that he was attributed to socialist realism without me. At the beginning of Düsseldorf, Kurt started pursuing me, but in the end he returned to selflessness.

So what is the real difference between the non-self of socialist realism and the non-self that Kurt finally sought?

I think it lies in the phrase "Never look away".

(It's another bullshit hahaha I shed tears when I didn't get a ticket from an untimely person)

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Extended Reading

Never Look Away quotes

  • NKWD Major Murawjow: Whoever saves a life saves the entire world.

  • Kurt Barnert: You're so beautiful, it's almost unromantic. It's far too easy to love you. Do you love me? Do you love me? Otherwise it doesn't work for me. Without love, it won't work.