Emma Watson's acting skills in the past few years have really not improved at all, and her performance has no sense of hierarchy at all. The first time I entered the castle and rescued my father, it should have been a touching scene, but I couldn't feel the deep father-daughter bond. "I will definitely go out." When she traded her freedom for her father's liberation, please allow me to speculate on the mood of a brave daughter: she is eager to save her father, and the beast is terrifying; although it is unlikely to go out, as long as It's good for my father to go out; I can also get out on my own. The emotions should be very complicated, but her performance makes people feel that she is not worried that she will not be able to get out (the heroine halo?). And, Belle "returned" to Paris and learned the truth about her mother's departure, the great maternal love that her mother let her father leave in order to keep her safe, and the grief and helplessness that her father had to abandon her mother, and her love for her daughter. Belle was still just crying when she cried, with a dull and boring face. I hope Emma can take a good look at the character's emotions. Not as good as the high school girl in "The Wallflower Boy" a few years ago, although she was robbed of a lot of limelight by Sister E. ╮(╯▽╰)╭ What's more cute is that when "Beast" and Belle were emotionally boosted, the eldest cousin hadn't turned into a human figure yet, and his hairy face conveyed the budding excitement of the boy's spring heart. 2333 The plot has nothing to say... The story is very old-fashioned, and the director didn't want to dig deeper into something new anyway. Maybe it's just to tell us that we should read more and have a common language with girls who are addicted to books and independent. If you don't study, you will be played around, just like the villagers who hate knowledge are casually ignited by a warrior, and they will be burned and beaten. Ah, the scene where Gaston deliberately angered the villagers, and the "speech" scene reminds me of the Führer? ? ? ←_← The singing and dancing are also very old. The song is average, and the melody is not innovative. Dancing is just... One scene that was super super super super super disappointing was the night where Belle danced with "The Beast." In the previous scene when Belle was dining, the happy scene of the furniture was quite colorful and interesting, and I was looking forward to the scene where the protagonists danced later. As a result... It was a wonderful moment when the relationship between the two protagonists warmed up, and there was a lame "dance", which can be said to be a real awkward dance. It made people feel that they had never learned dance at all, and the actors and directors were so disappointing. The eldest sister in the wardrobe added "stars" to the skirt for nothing =_= Some surprising points: 1. Gay is gay in Laifu, I personally think this character is the most plump character. In the early stage, he admired Gaston so much that he even went against his own conscience to help Gaston. In the end, it turned out that he was not taken seriously by others, so he helped the furniture to resist the burning, killing and beating of the villagers. 2. The clever and lovely "furnitures" are actually played by Grandpa Ian! big surprise! 3. Lai Fu praised Gaston's awkward singing and dancing scenes. 4. Actually there are three different vibrativodes, hahahahahaha, it's just that the passers-by, the little brother is unintentionally being liberated.
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Saw someone talking about the feminism of Beauty and the Beast, and by the way.
As soon as Belle appeared, she was positioned as a "weird person" who was isolated by everyone. She was the only one in the village who liked to read. Consider the ethos of this closed village: everyone is afraid of reading, but Belle, an outsider, is different. She is from Paris, which can be regarded as a progressive civilization, and Belle has lived here for so many years (for the time being, think she was brought here by her father since she was a baby), but the village still rests on its laurels and even prevents Belle from teaching other girls. Recognition.
Belle yearns for the wider world outside, but what about the end? The director's handling is like a middle school student writing an essay, and he has to echo the beginning and the end, and have a happy dance. Belle and the "Prince" who also longed for the outside world just stayed in this castle, everyone gathered together happily and unforgettable tonight.
The image of those advanced women in the front was forgotten by the director.
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