To tell the truth, the first half of the feminist society is seriously uncomfortable. It is not the low-level male laborers who drink tea and wash the glass and dance ballet, but the women with big belly and big belly but full of yellow mouth. There are also short parents who are completely upside down. It's a ridicule of how big a woman cheating is, and those men with long hair and fluttering beard and pole dancing.
When the style of painting changed and returned to reality, the street was full of masculine sexy beauties with thighs. The expression on the face of the heroine who had traveled from my daughter country was the same. Look at our world again with the filter. In the accustomed reality contrast, under the brainwashed theory over and over again, feminism is a flower in the dust, okay? Don't think that this is a reality peculiar to the existence of Western capitalist society. We have long been equal between men and women. Is this really the case?
I admire the courage and humor of the French people, and they dare to start everything. Except for the unpleasant ugly women (men), the whole film is quite educational. It brings out the brainless conversations that have long been accustomed to life, such as "Her novels are very feminine, clean and tidy, and you know it was written by a woman at a strong glance." "You say that, is it just because she is a woman?" This deliberately contradicts the deep-rooted label, which ironically is not reality. What?
Single men at home are constantly talking about getting married and having children. It’s not good for a man to go to a bar to drink booze. Being harassed or even raped is a matter of minutes. Men must wear neatly repaired hair and wear underwire underwear that lifts the balls. The street is generous. God, it is naturally her. Jesus is far less important than the Virgin Mary.
But regardless of the patriarchal world or the feminist world, men and women must always learn to live in harmony and thrive together. So, in another parallel world, we still sit down and talk about love.
The greatness of this film is here. It does not stop at the social arguments of ridicule masculinity and irony on feminism, but talks about love and humanity with a serious face, which is very interesting.
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