There are no taboos in falling in love - police and prisoners meet in prison. The police began to make a careful plan to help their sweetheart.
Trust - trust each other with the people you love. The younger brother trusted and helped the police elder brother. The elder brother believed that the female prisoner that the younger brother said was a good person and was his favorite teacher before.
Righteous hate can be enforced - female teacher ends up shooting the boss behind the drug deal.
Great family love - the policeman's father was also a policeman before. He rushed to give money to his son. He did not interfere with everything his son did for love, and only silently helped him and let him pursue his own life.
True friends - no reprimands, only unconditional trust support. The female prisoner's friend took them into hiding.
These people are positive, they are not swayed by the external order, they live and die for love.
This is an abstract movie. A young police officer falls in love with his older female prisoner, walks in a foreign town after a successful escape from prison, and finally runs to the helicopter that just stopped unguarded when he is surrounded by police at a friend's house. The plane ascends to the sky.
It's a paradise that doesn't exist, but it's truly aspirational.
The order of reality is portrayed as an absurd, utterly darkness-controlled blob.
Kill the villains who control the real world, escape, and fly to the sky with your loved ones...
This pair of paradoxical surreal lovers both shaved their heads in an exotic town, wearing a white T-shirt, blue and black jeans, very cool. Blanchett shaves his head for the filming, just like Wang Ji's "Pink".
Another: watching the movie directly when you don't know anything about the background of the movie is happy, but when you know that "Paradise" is related to the famous Kieslowski posthumous work, it feels boring. No expectations is the best way to watch a movie.
2007.6.17
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