Marie and Isa, they met at the factory. Marie takes in Isa in a house she borrows. The two went on strike together, wandered together, looked for jobs together, and cheated food and drink together. They met two bar security guards, and the four of them hung out together. They were loved, but not the two men.
But they are different. Although Isa will accept money from the security boyfriend, she refuses to have sex with him. She accepts different jobs, no matter how difficult it is, she is always generous. Perhaps, she doesn't have high requirements for life, as long as the four of them are together, love each other, and live up to each other. Marie is quiet, she has sex with her boyfriend, but clearly tells him that she doesn't love him. She is always negative about work. Tired of her life, she was desperate to escape, but was unable to do so.
They are fine together. Until he appeared, he was rich, handsome, and fulfilled almost all of Marie's fantasies about a man, or about life. She put herself into this game she couldn't afford at all. She discovered his fascination and began to hate that she couldn't escape, and this hatred made her more sure of the reality that she was being held captive. She then resorts to fantasies, fantasizing that he has fallen in love with her. This fantasy reached its climax when he took her to the beach, and she laughed, kissed, and every movement had a sweet taste. Sadly, I have to leave after all. Marie can't face reality until Isa tells her the truth and she breaks down. The two had a big fight and left.
The imagery of the film is very beautiful and precise. A short shot can accurately convey happiness and sadness to the audience. Like the scene of Marie and her heartbreaker on the beach, there are only four or five shots, but the sweetness of dreams and the absent-minded betrayal of men are vividly displayed. The whole movie is as light as "Arctic Circle Lovers", but behind this freshness reveals too much sadness, the paleness of friendship in front of love, the powerlessness of unrequited love, and the stubborn pain of hurting each other.
And the final outcome seems to be doomed. I was not surprised to see Marie's death. That man may just be the lifeline for her to escape from her life. What she didn't know was that she was tired of life itself. A man couldn't save her at all, but death could.
The sex scenes of Marie and the heartless man are very exciting. From the beginning of the fall, the women's struggle, surrender, and flattery in love are shown step by step, and the performance is vivid and vivid. This is nothing compared to Lust and Caution.
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