It is worth thinking about a question for our male compatriots: How big are the side effects of feminism on our men’s lives?
It is often said that marriage is the tomb of love. After watching this movie, poor marriage management will be the end of life. . . . .
An inverted wife's strict character broke out and was blackmailed after cheating on her back. She was forced to confess to her wife. The wife's reaction: "Go and get rid of the mistress!" After the wife killed Xiaosan and dissected his body, his wife Guanyan was blackmailed by Xiaosan's accomplices. The wife's reaction: "Done it all!" Sword directly to the door and broke Xiaosan's accomplices.
Wife Guan Yan discovered that his wife had a serious mental problem, and sooner or later he would be killed by his wife. He mustered up the courage to set up a situation to kill his wife (making it an accident), but in the end he did not escape the fate of being killed. (Killed in revenge by the surviving Xiaosan's accomplices)
The story is a standard soap opera routine, but there are many details about the character of the heroine and wife. . . . . I believe that many good men (after getting married/becoming a dad) will feel painful after seeing them (especially the wife who has a strong personality, or a strong desire for control, or a high economic status)
In the future, if feminism rises, when the wife becomes the "queen dowager" in the family, the husband becomes a "slave"? ! (The heroine of this film has a sense of interchangeability between men and women, reflecting the patriarchal dictatorship))
The heroine Luna is a wonderful wife of the Trinity (control maniac + obsessive-compulsive disorder + delusional disorder), and her strong economic status (both parents are middle-class) makes her have a practical right to speak to her family. But she does not stand alone by outsiders, choosing to be a housewife behind the scenes "listening to politics" to manipulate and control the "development plan" (children's family education, company operations, family entertainment, and the time schedule of sex with her husband). There is a husband in every move (the whole drama keeps repeating the dog-blood dialogue: "How much do you love me?" The husband must answer the standard answer "I love you more than the moon and the stars").
Because women have long been responsible for the management of home affairs in the Lord, and they are sensitive and meticulous. If you become the head of the family, even if you do not replace the male dominance, you are still willing to be the shadow behind the man (not a shadow dancer but a puppet master), that is also a very good thing to take. It is even more terrifying if it is led by a senior female intellectual. Like Luna, she might incorporate all her family’s daily life (especially the fatal sex initiative is also dominated by women!) and behaviors. In the management system. (Men are actually more tolerant of managing the family, and they are not too critical.)
From a female point of view, it’s not a good thing either. It is impossible for any male to tolerate such suppression of male desire and control desire by females. In the end, the unbearable male has only three choices: Derailed and vented like a male protagonist. Divorce and separate, and kill those who dominate the family's feminist rights!
Personally, I feel that this film is more worthy of our male compatriots thinking about in addition to reflecting on the way couples get along or reflecting on the philosophy of family management: How big are the side effects of feminism on our men’s lives?
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