can you still love

Darron 2022-03-21 09:03:09

This is a sad movie, on Chesil Beach, the man and woman who were supposed to love each other are separated and turned around for a lifetime. Is it true that every person who has been separated has a back like this, but when he looks back, you keep walking forward. Time heals wounds and heals wounds. If it wasn't for the male lead's inferiority complex, none of this would have happened. Faced with a problem, a contradiction, how to solve it, rather than resolutely leave, turn around and leave. This is also the reason why first love is not easy to succeed. They still don't know what the world is like. Maybe psychological problems can be cured, but if the class gap in the family is eliminated? Imagine for a moment how long this love would last if they hadn't been separated?

An unhappy home where a mother has a brain trauma that often leaves her naked body, another family trauma that was abused by her father, how two people love each other and heal each other. In the face of a not-so-good world, could they have healed each other with love? What kind of love can survive and become the emotional sustenance of the other party.

How much of their separation was a matter of sex? Family problems, personality problems, plus a sex problem of nothing.

Leaving is a lifetime, cherish what you have.

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Extended Reading
  • Fern 2022-03-25 09:01:20

    #B+ For gods sake, can't the two of you collide with firewood and fire? It makes people anxious. It's really a silly and sweet era, and pure love makes people laugh at the aunt all the time. The interspersed piano music is so wonderful that you can't breathe, and it is completely irresistible to the British sound of the pure era. Are Billy Howle and Evan Peters brothers, some angles are so silly, like a rabbit

  • Kacie 2022-03-26 09:01:12

    The rhythm is terrible, it is extremely ugly, and the tears are forced, which is extremely embarrassing.

On Chesil Beach quotes

  • Florence Ponting: He knows the names of trees and flowers and constellations and he wears plimsolls, never shoes.

    Ruth Ponting: And his socks never match.

    Florence Ponting: Exactly.

    Ruth Ponting: And he doesn't know the difference between a croissant and a baguette.

    Florence Ponting: That's why I love him.

  • Edward Mayhew: [about his mother] When he used this horrible phrase, everything changed. Brain-damaged. Suddenly I saw her the way other people did.

    Florence Ponting: That must have been awful. You're always very kind to her. My mother just pretends to be brain-damaged.