The film begins with a conversation between blonde Andura and her roommate. Andura, who works in a factory, is a very simple girl who yearns for and believes in love. However, she has experienced a love tragedy. The interesting thing is that this is obviously a sad story of a girl who was deceived and deceived. The ubiquitous humorous elements added by Foreman are uniquely tempered, and the sadness and joy alternate with each other.…
The film is basically divided into three sections. The first section is a grand ball that opens shortly after, which is an inseparable complex of Foreman. At the dance, three middle-aged male soldiers drooled over three other young girls, one of whom was Andura. One of the soldiers wearing glasses took off his wedding ring in order to strike up a conversation with the girl. Such a move is a classic expression of a man or a woman's desire to hunt for extramarital affairs. It has been used in a large number of film and television works. However, the glasses brother's ring fell to the ground and rolled under the dining table of the three girls.... The picture of him looking for the ring under the girls' legs is very funny and familiar... And At the dance, Andura got to know the romantic pianist Mida, and the second part was next. Mida approached Andura by reading palms at the entrance of the stairs, and taught Andura how to resist in the room. The way of a pervert turned himself into a pervert...I have to say that he is a master in picking up girls...Andura's shy and eager look is very charming. At first, Andura took off her clothes and shyly asked to close the curtains and turn off the lights. When Mida repaired the broken curtains, Andura turned her head immediately when she saw the JJ that Mida almost showed... But when the two happened After a one-night stand, Andura could lie completely naked beside Mida who was also naked and flirt with her, wearing Mida's clothes with a happy face. I think this is the truest way a girl's psychology changes when she faces love. render. However, it then entered the third largest segment of the film, which was also the saddest and most joyous segment. Andura left her boyfriend and came to Mida's house with her luggage. She was looking forward to starting a new life with Mida. As a result, Mida was not at home, and she had to face Mida's opinionated father and strong, mean, conservative mother alone. This is the funniest part of the whole film, the conservative mother keeps ranting in front of her father and Andura, blaming her son for letting a girl come to his house so casually, and saying that the girl can't live in their house, she Thinking that the arrival of a strange woman is detrimental to the family's image... The mother's point of view also reflects the social environment and family values of that era. But the mother's nagging in exchange is only the husband and Andura's dozing. . . . A stubborn, conservative, broken-mouthed, annoying, and lovely mother figure represents the temperament of the whole film. At this time, Mida was dating a woman she just met in the restaurant. For Andura, her wishful pursuit of love turned out to be just Mida's condiment... Mi Da returned home. Da recognized Andura, but he wasn't too excited. On the contrary, his face was full of anxiety, which was obviously not what he should look like when he saw his lover. Then he was pulled into the bedroom by his mother, and he was not allowed to sleep with Andura for the night. Mida, mother, and father slept in the same bed. The mother was still thinking, complaining about why he brought a woman home, Mida Then he explained that he didn't invite Andura to come here at all, it was all Andura's wishful thinking, while his father was embarrassed between the two of them, and he was sometimes scolded by his mother... This scene was quite joyful, and the family of three looked extremely restless. funny. But when the camera showed Andura crying while listening to the conversation of the family of three outside the bedroom door, the atmosphere turned sad again. Such a night, such an ending, was cruel to her. Thinking of her longing for taking a long-distance bus to take her to a strange city to find her love, and then seeing the embarrassed, down-to-earth, and despised situation, love sometimes really catches you off guard... ..
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