against fatalism

Madelyn 2022-03-22 09:01:33

Tom Ford wants to watch the audience find their emotional shadow in his mirror. I believe that the vast majority of people have experienced hurt and hurt in love. We can neither use this pain as inspiration to create a song or a sculpture like an artist, nor write like Edward in the story. A virtual reality novel - we just swallow these experiences and forget about them, and occasionally lick our wounds when we're drunk or late at night, that doesn't mean we don't have feelings or feelings.

Humans are extremely complex animals, and I don't think we would still be one of the most complex species even if one day we discovered other higher intelligent beings in the universe. Because we have too many subtle and unspeakable nerves and myriad causes and effects.

If Susan was still happily married, do you think she would still have the heart to read her ex-husband's stinky, long drafts of novels? Will you invite him out for dinner and meet up to wait for the revival of the old relationship? She is unhappy, so she can understand Tony who was hurt by her with the mentality of being hurt. Is there anything wrong with Susan? She is just like most women in the world, hoping to have everything: love passion and life security. The life Tony brought her was far from the environment she was familiar with growing up. She couldn't live in a small house where she could enter the house and see the bed, but Tony was satisfied with that. What he pursued was not what she was used to. those material guarantees. I have always felt that there is no right or wrong in the human world, only intersections and interlaces. Gained, lost, lost and found, gained and lost... This is how our world and human history spiral forward. Almost everyone in the audience sees Susan as a ruthless and ruthless bitch, but I don't think there's anything to blame for her decision. Everyone can make mistakes, right? I chose A, lost A for B, and then wanted to return to A and threw B, just like when we were doing multiple-choice questions in school. In addition to the fact that Susan is carrying her husband to communicate with others, it is unreasonable to have an abortion from two perspectives, both morally and emotionally.

Tom Ford's fatalism is heart-stopping. Although the prophet-like Susan's mother appeared only once, she finished the most intriguing lines. She told her daughter that all girls end up being their mothers. He also said that the virtues you love about him now will be the faults he makes you hate in the future. I can't agree with either. I don't believe in genetic determinism, and I don't believe in fate. How can humans evolve if all daughters end up being mothers? How is the world changing? As for the latter, it's more like a woman who finds out that her husband's original strengths are actually pretending after getting married... Besides, I don't think in the film, Susan fell in love with Tony, not what they call romance (or the word is Weak, women are so hypocritical), but Tony believed in Susan's ability and potential from the bottom of his heart, and he encouraged her to do what he really loved, telling her that she was stronger than she knew. At that moment, Susan and Tony had the same soul and soul. That's why they really came together.

I don't think Tom Ford should use "When you love someone, you have to be careful with it because you might never get it again." to sum up the spirit of the whole story and take the film down a notch. What the story wants to explain, it is enough to leave an aftertaste, no need to explain. Needless to say, it works better most of the time.

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Extended Reading

Nocturnal Animals quotes

  • Edward Sheffield: When someone loves you, you have to be careful with it!

  • Edward Sheffield: [to Susan] When you love someone you have to be careful with it, you might never get it again.