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Alta 2022-10-27 01:45:43

This film can be subtitled - Colette's upbringing in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Colette, a young girl who is in love with her husband, is in love with her husband, but her husband is a man who loves gambling and spending money. Relying on his reputation, he constantly hires gunmen to help him write articles. When the gunmen can no longer submit good works , but unexpectedly discovered that Colette had the ability to write, writing for him like a slave. In the end, the work was successful, the husband gained both fame and fortune, and the influence of the protagonist of the work was unprecedented, which almost changed an era, and everyone is learning from Claudien. In the process of being a gunman, Colette gradually felt her husband's infidelity, deception and suppression of her, indifference and denial of her credit; and the encouragement of her same-sex friends, Colette finally chose to divorce, so she created a family of His own legendary life as a pioneer and icon of the times.

The film uses linear notes, which will mark the time of the event; there is no real filming of Colette's unruliness; her husband suppressed her too much, and the actor portrayed a scumbag so three-dimensionally and plump! In contrast, Keira Knightley's portrayal of Colette is very flat. The same-sex sex scene can only be regarded as a small surprise; the feeling is that the open marriage cannot go on, the man does not respect the work of the woman, and the woman finally wakes up and chooses to divorce. The awakening process is long, and the manifestations of awakening—the Egyptian dance, the kissing on the same-sex stage, and the explosions are not enough. The final achievement is shown through subtitles. Thanks to the secretary of Colette's first husband for not burning the manuscript, Colette finally got back his copyright.

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Extended Reading

Colette quotes

  • Colette: I Can Read You Like The Top Line of an Optician's Chart.

  • Colette: Did you ever feel like you were playing a part, Sido?

    Sido: In what way?

    Colette: As a wife. Or a mother. Like you were just going through with it.

    Sido: Sometimes, as a wife. Never as a mother.