The mutual erosion of consciousness and reality: the song of inferiority complex

Katrine 2022-01-24 17:48:03

"Maybe" is
possible.
Possible formation.
The possible thing is only
a physical erosion,
which burns every kind of aesthetics or calistic (sensibility).
——Marcel Duchamp The

following are all nonsense:

First of all, the film tells neither desire nor love, but the inner struggle of a blind woman.
A movie is a story told by a blind girl for the audience, and a story is a stage for inner struggle. But the story is not coherent, the blind girl is constantly changing the story in the process of telling, and the stage is constantly changing.
The method of narration is not language, but direct inner activity. Blind women bring the audience into their own consciousness, so there are often plots without logic in reality.

Why does the blind girl need this story? Before the film ends in the blind girl's masturbation, the blind girl is always inferior. The most intuitive manifestation of inferiority in the film is that she can't satisfy her husband (due to inferiority she doesn't even want to try), and she can't get satisfaction. In this situation, suspicion of her husband was created, and suspicion created Elin. The desire of the blind girl has been suppressed in reality. The desire is in all aspects, including the desire to be concerned and protected. She needs to vent. The media are Elin and Einar, but the media alone is not enough. In order to play the role of the media, she Need a story.

What is this story? First look at Elin and Einar. Elin was originally the product of the blind women’s anxiety and suspicion. She got the things that the blind women could not get, including the attention, protection and husbands that the blind women needed, or all the desires of the blind women. Therefore, the blind women envy and hate. I hope to stage the tragedy that happened to me on Elin, and then expand the tragedy. Einar represents another kind of personality that is repressed deep in the blind woman’s heart. It can be said to be her id, but this id is distorted due to long-term depression. He is ugly, has sexual addiction, and anxiety. I hate her self. The story itself is simple. Elin becomes the third person between the blind woman and her husband. Elin becomes blind, Elin becomes pregnant, and Elin is insulted. During this period, Einar has always been secretly in love with Elin, or regarded Elin as an object of adultery. The story is really dominated by blind women when Elin becomes blind, because suspicion is often not subjectively controlled. After Elin was pregnant, Elin suffered insults and it was the blind woman's need to vent. However, the blind woman knew that this was just a story she made up. After Elin was humiliated, the role of the story was almost complete. At this time, the blind woman’s husband said "Why do you have to make her so miserable?" This is the blind woman's reconciliation and reflection on herself. At this time, the husband represents the blind woman's rationality. It is worth noting that Einar was also present at this time. He appeared abruptly. The husband said, "Why don't you let Elin and Einar be together?" Then the blind girl sneered, cast a contemptuous look at Elnar, and said, "No one can Live with people with anxiety disorders.” This is another manifestation of blind women’s inferiority complex, and it reflects part of the reason for inferiority. The implication is that no one can live with a blind person. The reason why Einar has anxiety disorder instead of The other diseases are because the blind woman thinks that she is uneasy and jealous because she can’t see anything at this time, and it's crazy and similar to anxiety. That is to say, the reason why the husband cannot live with the blind girl is not because of blindness. Female blindness is because blind women have "anxiety disorders." Now we can see all the characteristics of the blind girl. She is not only inferior, but also self-loathing. She has no self-confidence and does not believe in other people. At the end of the movie, she believed in her husband, but it was out of reason. She still didn't believe in herself. She said, "Everything will be fine, as long as he has more sense of humor." Why does the husband need a sense of humor? Because he needs to use this to accommodate her conjectures that may still appear in the future.

At the end of the story, the blind Elin waved to Einar with a big belly, and said to his daughter, "Even though he is ugly, he is a good person, and he often helps me." (not the original words, roughly), this signifies the blind woman and the deepest heart. Disgusted by her reconciliation, the blind girl began to accept herself frankly.
This story seems to be an vent of desire, but it is actually a solution to inferiority. It is a war between the blind woman and herself. Desire is only the fuse, and the result of the war is reconciliation.

If we look at the story as a whole, we will find that although the teller of the story is a blind woman, the whole story is not always under the subjective control of the blind woman. A lot of the "reality" that a blind girl can recognize is uncertain. She needs her own imagination and recollection. For example, she imagines that the ceiling is high, but this is true for her and does not depend on her will. The film is constantly changing in three spaces: the space created by the blind woman, the real space in the blind woman's consciousness, and the real real space. However, the proportion of real real space is very small. The blind woman's consciousness and reality are mixed, creating a space that is neither invented nor realistic. This story is the product of the mutual erosion of consciousness and reality.

What does this movie express?
1. Caring for the blind.
2. Caring for patients with anxiety disorders.
3. Tolerant of others, especially the weak, especially the weak who need you.
4.1 + 2 + 3 = sense of humor (this is of course one of the contents of the film to express rather than a summary). But apart from a sense of humor, what this movie really wants to express is:
5. Caring for yourself and accepting yourself.

The nonsense is over.

View more about Blind reviews

Extended Reading

Blind quotes

  • Ingrid: He still thought about the quote: 'How one man's hate could unite us all in love'.

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