people.

Karson 2022-12-24 00:21:32

Perhaps the most independent and commendable in the whole movie are the eldest and second sons of the heroine.
The eldest son resells drugs, buys them from others, mixes them with his mother's pills and grinds them into powder to make money by selling them. Another unique skill is to imitate other people's handwriting.
He asked his grandmother, Balzac, Goethe, Byron, and others whether they were realist or romantic writers. It is normal to say one wrong, and the cup was that five or six of his grandmothers made the wrong statement. . . .
He has been saving the money he earned. In fact, it is conceivable that he may finally leave this home and go to Madrid by himself, but he did not. He bought two tickets with his own money and gave the remaining money to his mother. I went back to the country with my grandma, and went back to work in the country. Instead of reading. What is the use of his grandma to distinguish between realism and romanticism? He can't even eat enough.

His youngest son also left the comfortable environment of being kept by others and came to live with his mother alone.

Her husband didn't love her at all, he was extremely harsh on her, and was killed by her in the end. The director did not incriminate his wife in the end, which is equivalent to nothing.
I suddenly remembered the "Purple Rose in Cairo". The two endings seem to be the opposite, and the expressions are somewhat similar.

Forehead. . . I'm too sleepy. . Stop writing.

Continue writing today, maybe the whole movie is nothing more than saying, what is life like? I'm not talking about those theories, ideals, morals, justice, but real life. We do not go back and record the unspoken life every day. There is no romanticism, no realism, only our real life and real choices.

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Extended Reading

What Have I Done to Deserve This? quotes

  • Antonio: I don't want you to work anywhere, got it?

    Gloria: What about the rent? And the television payments? And the service charges? And the children's clothes? And the doctors and food?

    Antonio: You're always thinking about luxuries!

  • Gloria: We live like gypsies and you don't want me to work. Do you think I enjoy it?

    Antonio: There are more important things than money.