"Soul Broken Tonight": Elegance and Horror

Cary 2022-10-23 17:04:16

If death does not constitute the judgment and pain of life, how much temperament does a woman have to face the sweetness and strange horrors of life?

When Diana's author father married her stepmother, the wealthy widow Mrs Tremaine, it was a sadness and pain in her heart. When Mrs Tremaine is mysteriously poisoned by gas, ambulance driver Frank meets the elegant Diana. In Diana's romantic style, Frank began to fall for himself and became the family driver of Mrs. Tremaine's family. That's when Frank begins to wonder about the dangers that lie beneath Diana's glamorous exterior.

Diana eventually killed Mrs Tremaine and, of course, her biological father, by manipulating the car. Due to the lack of evidence, she won the lawsuit, but this was not what she wanted. And when Frank wanted to reconnect with Mary, he was rejected by reason like her. Under the guidance of her lawyer, Diana learned that ne bis in idem, she wanted to pick up and face all the guilt - forever excluded from the legal treaty. And when Frank tries to get out of here, Diana drives with him.

For Frank, life is nothing but hustle and bustle. It is good to be successful in business, and it is indifferent to be in a state of poverty and poverty. And between feelings, he will not sacrifice a kind of spiritual thing, he can only wait for it, or even one foot on the boat.

Diana and Mary are the epitome of passion and reason. The confrontation between them is not only an apparent rival relationship, but also a confrontation in the understanding of love. Diana lost her mother at the age of ten, and out of hatred for her stepmother, she had the idea of ​​​​destroying everything. But Mary's love is more tender, and it is more in line with the male-dominated society's setting for women.

Diana's catastrophe tells us that all the ups and downs of emotions must be supported and purposed, and wishful thinking to the extreme can only be destroyed, or even the pain of burning jade. Diana has never regretted anything she did (except for the unintentional murder of her father). Her mind may not be very open and transparent, but there is a power beyond and above that picks up the bottom line of this story, and she is surrounded by the streets. As far as it is concerned, it is nothing but the past, and the absolute freedom of the heart is the meaning of life.

The most unpredictable femme fatale, her emotions are hot and anxious, rationality is no longer something that can be realized and pursued for her, and she only seeks her father's affection and love and Frank's sincerity. It's a pity that Frank is too superficial and can't really understand her, and he has a kind of resistance to heresy in his bones.

A little bit of shadow dream drifting off the acacia wine. Reincarnation, still clinging to inner emotions. The slanting wind and drizzle wash away the glitz and frailty like a ghost on the battlefield, and obtain a pure and continuous moment in the mind. The voice was slow in an instant, and out of punishment for those who hesitated and exiled in human nature, he must have made some shocking changes.

Where do you wake up tonight, the breeze and the moon on the banks of the willows. The past years, it should be a good day and a good situation in vain, even if there are thousands of styles, who would you say?

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Extended Reading

Angel Face quotes

  • Frank Jessup: [of Diane's 'evil' stepmother] ... If she's tryin' to kill you, why did she turn on the gas in her own room first?

    Diane Tremayne: ...To make it look as though somebody else were guilty...

    Frank Jessup: Is that what you did?

    Diane Tremayne: Frank, are you accusing me?

    Frank Jessup: I'm not accusing anybody. But if I were a cop, and not a very bright cop at that, I'd say that your story was as phony as a three dollar bill.

    Diane Tremayne: ...How can you say that to me?

    Frank Jessup: Oh, you mean after all we've been to each other?... Diane, look. I don't pretend to know what goes on behind that pretty little face of yours - I don't *want* to. But I learned one thing very early. Never be the innocent bystander - that's the guy that always gets hurt. If you want to play with matches, that's your business. But not in gas-filled rooms - that's not only dangerous, it's stupid.

  • Mrs. Catherine Tremayne: Charles, at times your charm wears dangerously thin. Right now it's so thin I can see through it.

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