I always thought James Spader was a very elegant actor. Whether it's playing a bohemian youth, a young student who is just beginning to fall in love, a criminal police detective, a professional lawyer... He all has a sub-academic spirit in his bones.
The content of the film is simple: sister and brother love.
"I'm almost 44," Nora said.
"I'm 27 years old." Max replied with a relaxed expression.
In the next second, the two of them hugged together.
Don't be fooled by the poster, in fact, this film is very innocent. A pure and serious young man meets a maverick and bad sister, and then falls in love with each other.
Even if the age is different, what if the class is different? In the end, the two lovers are still married.
For romance films, I don't like to watch plots that are particularly complicated. So this "White Palace" was filmed just right, and it is a story of two people from beginning to end.
Worry about age, fear of the disparity of family backgrounds on both sides-although the heroine is always troubled by these small problems, but in the end, she still believes in love.
I liked the scene where Max knocked over Nora's mailbox while drinking and driving when they met. She smiled like a child at his embarrassment, and he nearly fell unconscious on the grass.
I also like that Max waits for Nora at the door of the burger joint the next night. She and her companions ran out of the store jokingly, like a teenage girl. And he sat in the car window and smiled, as if he had become a young boy who was first in love.
Love is love, it has nothing to do with others, it has nothing to do with age, it has nothing to do with class.
Even if it sounds tacky, don't we all hope that this kind of love can last forever in harmony?
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