Dreams are pieced together with little intentions

Melba 2022-01-15 08:01:30

The dirt
I remember most is the potholes and mud pools after the rain. They are tumbling and splashing in it. I think it’s like the Midi camp the next day. It’s a feeling of difficulty. I remember when Xiaobu walked barefoot. After the muddy land full of good memories, a large number of comrades stayed there and refused to evacuate on the last night. The mud is like a dream we hold fast to. Do not abandon or give up, and play in the dreams that we have cast. , This is a bit sad, but it makes me warm.

Mother
Elliott’s mother is very old Chinese. Isn’t the world the same as all mothers? I always feel that this kind of family relationship that covers the reality can always touch some people more. I said that I love family affection far more than those dog-blood love, there are always so many "parents, grandparents, uncles and aunts" can Touched me. As for the last, the most beautiful ending is the most beautiful ending. Did Antao do all of this, or did it do all of this in that era?

Hippies and
Chinese people should feel more deeply about this. In today's day when rock is increasingly demonized, where can we realize our youthful dreams and where is the exit?

The grass is
as big as the grass, and it is easy to make a decision. I think the grass always has this kind of power to attract us. People may have a grass complex.


Sex and marijuana
Sex is just as addictive as marijuana. But Antao uses a vague way to take the essence and remove the dross, presenting us with some different feelings. In short, sex and marijuana are not the subject of this film, but a channel to express so many dreams.

So many intentions make it difficult for me to digest for a while. But those dreams are common to us.

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Extended Reading

Taking Woodstock quotes

  • [Elliot finds his father pouring a jug into the freshly-filled swimming pool]

    Elliot Tiber: Dad, that's bleach for the laundry.

    Jake Teichberg: It kills the germs. What's the difference?

  • [the Chamber of Commerce discussing tourism ideas]

    Frank: Well, okay. We got a lot of dairy farms around here, right? And a fair number of bulls. Okay, you've all heard of the running of the bulls in that town in Spain, Pampoona.

    Elliot Tiber: Pamplona.

    Frank: Well, no one's doing one in the Catskills. Seems to be a big draw over there.

    Annie: It would be very amusing to see all those Jews from Levitsky's summer colony, you know, the ones with the black top hats and the curls, running for their lives chased by our local livestock. Wouldn't that be a wonderful sight!