Should he be laughed at? No, no one dared to despise "seriousness", although it might bring him only humiliation, torture, and deeper despair.
This is the saddest biopic I've ever seen, although Tim Burton tries to keep it lighthearted and witty from start to finish, and DEPP makes a compromising filmmaker dumbfounding, but when I see Ed Wood reluctantly changed his girlfriend for a little investment, dressed in women's clothes and drank in frustration. When he said that he was a director in front of an arrogant actress, my heart felt as bad as being cut by a knife. It reminded me of watching "Elephant Elephant" many years ago. Everyone knows that he is a monster, but he has dreams in his heart, and he even reads poetry... I really have no immunity for such people who compromise with a weak attitude in life, after watching The Elephant Man And for days after Ed Wood, I've had a hard time calming down that sadness. Talented people deserve respect, but can people who have no talent but work hard be ridiculed, despised, and insulted?
Everyone has the right to dream, no matter if he is a donkey or a flying saucer, all dreams are equal and should not be laughed at, I think, TIM arranged for Ed Wood to finally raise his eyebrows after many years of embarrassment He must have thought so when a film that was still bad made it to the screen, even standing with a great director he respected.
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