This is the real drama

Wayne 2022-01-15 08:01:55


Spent a movie with a movie ticket on Tencent Video.
The tone is good, it's the type I like. Sure enough, the scenery in the western film fascinates me. Two days later, I can still think of the misty forest in the film.
The feeling of the movie is to stop, every event gives you a picture, and then the rest can only be guessed by you in the results that appear afterwards, just like a fill-in-the-blank question. However, this is also what I like.
However, I have to say that this movie is at a loss in the story. This movie named after the heroine can't see the charm of the heroine at all. Where is the legendary sturdy? It's completely a dog-blood drama of "brilliant beauty" ~ the heroine is an over possessive paranoid, she can't see her ability in the play at all, even if she tame the eagle (it doesn't find it difficult at all), even if she Cut down the tree (Is that axe difficult?), even if she can bandage (that is obviously the reason she planted it). . . . All the scenes that wanted to show her ability completely failed.

It was dull all the way, I thought there would be a subversive climax, but I didn't expect it to be so dull all the way.
As a result, a scene that wanted to use a fierce girl to support the scene has evolved into a scene of misfortune in which she loves to make troubles by her husband's side.
Then again, I was thinking that those six bedsheet scenes failed to show whether the love of the heroine for the heroine was true or false. . . .

So. What does this movie want to tell me?

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Extended Reading
  • Jake 2022-03-14 14:12:26

    The heroine is destined to be a lone star...

  • Winona 2022-04-22 07:01:47

    I bought the novel for a long time and haven't read it yet, but I watched the movie first. How can I put it, I don't think it's particularly powerful, and the level of drama is not enough to make a movie.

Serena quotes

  • Serena: I think you've taken none months to do about six months' work. But a few changes should greatly increase profitability.

    Buchanan: What did you find, wife or a partner?

    Pemberton: Both.

  • Sheriff McDowell: The logging barons always cry "jobs" and "free enterprise," but the truth is, you barely pay enough to put food on the table!

    Pemberton: Oh, we pay more than any job these men can get, and that's why there's a line fifty-deep every time there's an opening.

    Sheriff McDowell: Openings? Yes, you always have openings, don't you, Mr. Pemberton? Because your camps have killed more men than the war between the States.