When I got home, I bumped into my roommate watching this movie. Dazed and hopeless, he joined in with a can of beer.
The first shot I saw was of Depardieu lounging in front of the hair salon. "He's getting really big now," the roommate said. "I didn't expect him to be so handsome when he was young!" The
two youthful bodies wore the most fashionable flared pants and tight vests of the 70s, roaming the sparsely populated French street town. They don't seem to have the quick success and worry of the Chinese youth right now. Don't get me wrong, they certainly have many material needs; in fact, their needs are purely physical and material. However, it is this purity that seems to make their behavioral motives rich in metaphysical spirituality. Yes, because their needs are entirely to satisfy their physical desires at the moment: when they are tired, they grab the car and move on; when they are hungry, they grab money to buy food to feed themselves; if they want a woman, they lure one back on the street. .
The behavior of not accepting any established norms and moral constraints makes them worry about prison all day long, but under the filter of time and space, they appear incomparably generous and noble. Human civilization is of course based on the controlled satisfaction of one's own desires and instincts, but it is this cover-up that has continuously produced hypocrisy, deceit, wretchedness, and unbearableness.
Living in a state of debauchery and freedom, without worrying about exchanging life time for money and material needs, isn’t this the standard of heaven? However, self-interest is often detrimental to others, so society has developed rules and regulations to maintain a balance of interests. Inferring from this, the existence of heaven itself is a paradox. The happiness of any individual is based on the suffering of another individual or group. Maybe this is for a low resource situation? This again involves the relative concept of "sufficient". ╮(╯▽╰)╭ Too little knowledge and too much thinking.
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