I don't know the American female poet very well, so I don't see the film as a biography but as a story. Although the footage of the film does not show off too much skill, it is undoubtedly excellent in aesthetics. The texture of oil painting has certain commonalities with "Portrait of a Burning Woman" in style. There are many empty mirrors and the soundtrack of classical female arias interspersed. In the film, a painting of the life of the nineteenth-century American upper class unfolds. Such aesthetics have brought me a quiet, relaxed psychological experience with a hint of divinity, but combined with the plot of the story and the fate of the characters, there is a sense of brokenness and depression in harmony. "A woman's eyes are like a melancholy mirror lake. As long as the wind blows, it can silently break the tranquility between them, revealing waves of sadness that seem to be absent. The feeling of oppression that "All the Time" wanted to express but didn't convey to me, I felt it in this movie.
The most dazzling character in the film is probably not the protagonist Emily, but her friend, Miss Bofan, who is often witty. She read the Brontës, she could ask men speechlessly, and no one could not perceive her tact, and she was far more determined than Emily in that she was not shackled by the thoughts of the world. Compared with other women, she is the most vulnerable and pitiful. She doesn't have the "nervousness" that women are repressed by the environment and endowed by men. She married a math professor she hand-picked and went to a city she liked with comedy movies. The women in this movie probably won't face too tragic fate, but she can be regarded as one of the most comfortable and happy ones. "Keep this rebellion a secret, let obedience cover the surface and keep a revolutionary heart. It may be hypocrisy, but no one confuses external and internal piety," she said to Emily, who Emily is tough or sophisticated, she created a genius-like behavior system for surviving in this cramped world incompatible with her uninhibited soul, she found the best way to survive, but I am sad that she is like a peerless beauty Middle Eastern girls hide their faces under black veils.
Mrs. Dickinson has very few scenes, and I was most impatient at first. She and Miss Boufan are polar opposites in the film. She is always silent, sad, or dazed or bedridden in the camera. Lin Daiyu was even more depressed and sad. She was so unremarkable among the quick-witted Dickinsons. And the night she was sitting on the sofa in the camera, she was still stunned and dull, like the best woman of her time who was disdained by Emily Dickinson. I even picked up my phone outside the camera to kill this lengthy paragraph. The plot of the. She murmured with tears in her eyes: "My life passed like a dream, and I didn't seem to be involved. Since Winnie was born, a kind of melancholy has haunted me, and I thought it was satisfaction." Before she became an old woman, she also had a girlhood like the morning sun and morning dew. The picture scroll of her life was still to be unfolded slowly. She was pushed forward by the road designed by the times for women. She was not taught or taught. She was given the ability to think about herself, whether it was a hobby or an ambition, she married the man who attended the prom together, and then began to have children. Since then, she has become one of countless identical mothers in the United States, guarding the house since childhood. Die, she will never even understand what she is silently grieving, and what she has never gained in such a happy and happy house family.
After watching this movie, my heart is seldom heavy. Emily was trapped in that era, and fortunately relied on her family to escape from the world and refused to join forces to create an immortal poem. Miss Boufan entered the world with a prepared hypocrisy in order to seek a reluctant balance between the world and the soul. And most women walk through this life with tears, doubts, sadness and even madness. I worry about it, is the era I live in really better than it was then? Where should my soul be placed? I don't want to be Emily, so I can only imitate Miss Bouvan's insincere? I'll figure it out. How to live this life? I stopped writing, and I remained silent with a confused mood.
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