As a "female-oriented" film, three generations of women have one thing in common, that is, they can freely choose their own feelings. The old lady chooses to live independently in the way she likes, the mother chooses to end the marriage decisively and return to the marriage, and Wei freely chooses her boyfriend. Generally speaking, the "first kiss" is always "give" to someone, and at this time, the choice becomes very important. Bold, withdrawn, passive, regretful, hasty...whatever you choose, the result will be. And the French people's free ideas about love and marriage are indeed very unrestrained. At the beginning of the film, the German teacher asks the students to write the parent's name - can't remember exactly what - many children say that their parents are divorced and ask which one should be filled in. So I say, this is a very good anti-feudal masterpiece that liberates women's minds. There is also an unknown point. After reading a lot of comments, they are all "licking" Sophie Marceau, and there is no related statement-some people say that Wei's mother and German teacher met because she wanted to "derail" once with "" "revenge" for cheating husband, which mentions that it was so sexy at the beach of so-and-so, which indicates that the two should have dated more than once, and then the mother became pregnant and fell out with her husband, and ended up with her German teacher Going to Africa, except that the old lady once said "this child is an opportunity", vaguely suggesting that the child may be the husband's, and never said it again. I haven't watched the second part yet, and I don't know if there will be any supplements later. Maybe my focus is a little off, and I'm a little curious about the "romantic disease" that the French are terminally ill. Another incident comes to mind—about a decade ago, there was a student movement in France called the "Storm of May". If the background of the film is synchronized with reality, then as the parents of thirteen-year-old Wei, it should be a generation of young people who have experienced the accumulation of social conflicts before and after the May storm and experienced its outbreak. This "freedom trend" - of course, the more important thing is the social contradiction behind it - has an impact on the French generation's views on marriage, love and family. I think it must exist.
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