Okay. Let’s talk about the casting first. Nancy is really a little too old. Although she is a girl who is prematurely aging due to drug addiction, she is not like 50. Gary Oldman, my favorite actor, has a very good acting skills, Johnny Rotten said that seeing him is like seeing Sid himself. He didn't have to choose one hundred percent of his acting skills. He is also certified as a fan of sex pistols; but GO is really too pure and pitiful. How to say that Sid looks bad. Poor little bastard! GO's sid exaggerates the hopelessly naive, cruel and stupid childishness and sensitivity and vulnerability of sid. Without the little bastard second-generation ancestor he usually shows to the world most of the time, he has become soft Good to deceive the puppy, too lovable. There's no use of Courtney Love to play Nancy in this film. I'm the director, and now I'm fucking regretting it. How about the ready-made Nancy? Then the broker feels the most restored. Rotten teeth casting is powerless to complain. I like the scene of two people kissing in the backstage bathroom during the performance. The no feelings written on the mirror is really punk and romantic. I think the ending is the best part of the whole movie. Sid went to a pizza house in the ruins to eat pizza, lonely and lonely, reminiscent of those days when Nancy was there. Sid walked out of the restaurant with a group of children playing trendy pop music, implying that the era of punk has passed away quietly. At the end, Sid regards the woman who appeared by chance as Nancy, which is embarrassing. "Hey Sid! But you don't even know her!"...Love blinds, love kills, love will tear us apart. And the last point, what a beautiful and romantic punk love story compared to others saying sid and nancy! I want to say is it really love? Compared to love, I feel that the two of them are more like two older children who live together together. The two flowers that bloom in the trash can cherish each other. Is it true love or the companionship of like attracting each other? I'm afraid they don't even know it when they die.
View more about Sid and Nancy reviews