I thought this story happened in the Howard Castle where Jay Chou married near York, but it turned out that Howard was not Peter Howard.
The film tells the story of Emma Thompson's sister Margaret and Helena's sister Helen, and their love and marriage, reflecting the profound contrast of the British classes in that era.
The elegant and intellectual elder sister married an old widower capitalist. After knowing that her husband's love affairs back then could only maintain superficial peace, she returned to the room after a strong smile, and fell on the ground and burst into tears.
My sister is enthusiastic, brave and kind. In order to help a poor couple, she put her heart in it too. Unmarried and pregnant, she decided to give birth to a child and raise it by herself.
At the end of the film, my sister and her husband, as well as my sister and my sister's children, live together in Howard Manor. The elegant pastoral scenery is full of sadness.
I wonder if they miss the time when their unmarried three siblings lived together before, drinking afternoon tea and eating pudding, laughing and discussing all the trivial matters in the country?
In the Dream of Red Mansions, Jia Baoyu said that a woman was like a pearl before she was married, exuding luster, and dimmed after marriage, slowly turning into lifeless fish eyes.
I want to say that it was because the man who married was a scumbag and was polished off by the scumbag!
Finally, I want to say: I really like the face of Emma Thompson! The most beautiful time in her movie I've seen so far.
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