Countryside, neighbors, food, coffee, and a touch of art.
It is related to the love triangle between the New Yorker, the Indian man, and the married uncle (named Dean, played by Uncle Tim).
If what happened in the first half of the story makes people have reverie about the little artist and Uncle Tim, the rough and fast-paced narrative in the second half makes people feel that the Indian man and the little artist are just a deliberate arrangement by the screenwriter. The traces are really unacceptable.
The distant mountains and dawn in Eden Town are easily reminiscent of Brokeback Mountain in Ang Lee's lens, while the warm town neighborhoods and all kinds of delicious private kitchen food are easy to arouse people's unanimous longing.
Yes, it was a nice little town.
In the movie, a beautiful town should have a beautiful emotion. Unfortunately, the love triangle between men and women in the play is not so beautiful, which is somewhat disappointing. Instead, it was the memory of old sam, the story about Taurus in Indian legends, and the blue starry sky oil painting that gave me a good impression of the American countryside.
Emotional scenes are really not a good selling point for Big Eden.
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