I haven't seen a romance movie like this in a long time. Even "Sherlock Holmes II" jewels can't hide Woody Allen's talent. But it always feels that the camera, music, and performance are limited by the script, perhaps sacrificing part of the emotional expression for the rhythm of the film. The effect is to greatly reduce the cost, it is easy to understand, and the viewing process is relaxed and enjoyable.
Against the background of the American jazz music in the 1930s, the film tells every depressed life how to live an ordinary life in a capitalist world.
You can avoid real misery with answers in the virtual world, but every real tragedy comes as a consequence of those false answers.
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