Reason and emotion are opposites, of course they are opposites, symbiosis, harmony, unity, interdependence and inseparable blabla, but they are still opposites. So my personal prejudice is that the smarter people are, the less they know how to love. Of course, because of being smart, he can keep you from discovering this problem.
Adrian is a world leader in optics. Does this kind of person have a brain disease after playing like this? If you can't get the kind of woman you want, you need to work hard to do it. This is something that ordinary people can see, can't he see it? of course not. His way of thinking is not like that. He wasn't looking for a woman at all. He is enjoying a sense of superiority.
From Cecilia's description, we can know Adrian's two biggest points, one, a world-class leader, and two, a strong desire to control. These two points are basically certain, he will not look for love, or even be afraid of love. Because love is the most uncontrollable thing in the world - not to mention other people's, sometimes you can't control yourself - of course he will disguise some other things as love. For example control.
It has nothing to do with whether you are a man or a woman, it has nothing to do with your relationship with him, he wants to control everything, and he doesn't allow everything to be out of his control. He likes to see you fearful, to see you helpless, to see you being teased. His pleasure comes from your pain, and there is nothing you can do about it. So catering to him is what he hates the most. If you enjoy everything he gives you, it will make him feel ashamed and feel like a clown. But if you want to run away, he'll enjoy playing with the ants on the ground.
Cecilia finally gave up asking for help and ended the nightmare in her own way. At the end she controlled James with words and firm eyes, and took away the Invisibility Cloak. The rest depends on how she writes.
Trivia:
1. Speaking of the film's opening, director Leigh Whannell said: "I wanted to put the audience in Cecilia's place without any backstory, let them feel everything through her, luckily I have Elisabeth Moss, she even You can communicate with the audience without saying a word.”
2. The handprint lens on the shower door is used in the trailer and DVD cover. But in the movie this scene was deleted. Because, Whannell thought, Cecilia's discovery of the vial was chilling enough.
3. The film was originally part of the Universal Dark Universe, originally slated to star Johnny Depp and written by Ed Solomon. But it was dropped due to the box office failure of The Mummy (2017), the launch of the Dark Universe. And "The Mummy" was originally a reboot of the first Dark Universe launch film "Dracula Untold" (2014) after the box office failure.
4. There are no natural pine forests in Australia, so the clip of Cecilia running into the woods was filmed in a plantation planted for furniture and Christmas trees. If it is during the day, you will see these pines are very neat and unnatural at all.
5. The name of the protagonist Cecilia comes from the Latin Caecus, which means blind or eyeless. Obviously, she cannot see invisible people. She's often referred to as a "C" in the movies, and apparently it's pronounced like "see."
6. The code on Adrian's door is 1933, the year the original movie was released.
7. The location of Adrian's house was filmed at Headland House, well-known to Sydney people. It was designed by Atelier Andy Carson and is located on the south coast of Werri Beach in New South Wales. The protruding volume rests above the stone-covered ground floor. Angled beams secure these extensions. Many of the interior shots of the home were shot at a mansion called Pepple Cove Farm in the small town of Kiama, about 120km south of Sydney.
8. Towards the end, Sydney wakes up feeling someone, sprays the Invisible Man with spray, waits for him to fall and runs out of the bedroom beside him before being hit from the front. So they are both there.
9. At the end of dinner, Adrian ordered pasta, sushi, and steak, and Cecilia chose steak because she needed him to have a knife in hand for later planning.
View more about The Invisible Man reviews