I now agree with the idea that "slag man" is a low-powered word

Stanford 2022-12-09 23:20:55

Subjective score: 8 points

Plot summary

It tells about a middle-aged unemployed male protagonist. Because the scumbag father (a famous photographer is very rich), he wanted to wash out the last batch of Kodak film that had to stop serving because of his late cancer. So began a three-person road trip including the hostess’s personal caregiver Omei. Finally arrived at the destination, before the photos were washed out, the father had passed away. In the end, the male protagonist saw that the last photos were fragments of the lives of himself and his mother, and finally ran away in tears.

Evaluation of feelings

The scum man's father really messed up his life and hurt all his relatives and lovers around him. His own younger brother didn’t get along with him all the time. When he saw him in person, he guessed that he was not a few days old, but the dinner table It's so destructive that you can't forgive me.

But when they finally arrived at their destination, all the photographers and juniors saw the light in his eyes after seeing the legendary photographer, and when the body was lifted out of the hotel, all the photographers used the shutter to see him off. I couldn't cry again at that time.

I also thought of a very popular video a while ago. The Mao Dun Award winner said that "Scumbag" is really an irresponsible word, a low-powered word. This movie resonates with this evaluation very much. The male protagonist made a mess of life, but he did achieve the pinnacle of his beloved photography career. His works have touched the whole world and are a beacon for many younger generations.

The last photo inheritance left to my son is also the last time I lost my family’s self-salvation for pursuing a career.

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Extended Reading

Kodachrome quotes

  • Ben: People are taking more pictures now than ever before, billions of them, but there are no slides, no prints. Just data. Electronic dust. Years from now when they dig us up there won't be any pictures to find, no record of who we were or how we lived.

  • Ben: We're all so frightened by time, the way it moves on and the way things disappear. That's why we're photographers. We're preservationists by nature. We take pictures to stop time, to commit moments to eternity. Human nature made tangible.

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