I saw two works. I remembered something I didn't want to admit for a long time.
Mainly because I like Sakamoto Ryuichi's music too much, so I went to the movies. Based on Emily Bronte's famous book, Wuthering Heights, the original book is actually quite tangled (plus the weird atmosphere, I haven't really liked this book in the past). Mainly I went to see the soundtrack of Ryuichi Sakamoto. The male lead in this movie version is the super handsome European star Ralph Fiennes who plays the grumpy protagonist Heathcliff in the novel. In the original book, Heathcliff is actually not very good-looking.
Heathcliff is a child of unknown origin who was adopted in the villa. He fell in love with the girl Catherine at home. When he grew up, Catherine married someone else (of course, compared with the current thinking, it has always been the same, To marry a young talent with a car, house and status~)
So Heathcliff ran away with a grudge. A few years later, he came back with a clear purpose of revenge, and continued to take revenge on Catherine's husband. Winning all of Catherine's husband's property by gambling, causing the young talent to drink and die of depression; Heathcliff also deliberately married her sister in front of Catherine. Desperate Catherine watched everything and died in pain.
The movie sees here, Ralph Fiennes' performance, let the audience see a man who can't get love, what he does under despair and pain, and under all victory there is pain. The moment he knew of Catherine's death, he threw off everyone's obstructions. He went to her coffin, smashed the glass on the lid with a punch, held the pale-faced Catherine from the coffin, and cried bitterly.
And the music theme written by Ryuichi Sakamoto for the movie appeared at this time. Everything a man does is for love. He saw his own vengeance leading to Katherine's death, and the pain couldn't have been greater.
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