The heroine of beck is very representative. She is beautiful, so she is not willing to be mediocre. Push herself is dating celebrity descendants peach and rich second-generation benji, doesn't she know that these people are not sincere to her? But there is no way. She wants to break into that circle, at least to get close to them. Just ask, who wouldn't be interested in a beautiful young blond beauty who can write poems?
At the same time, beck does not let anyone seduce anyone, including professors, publishers, psychologists, and peach. Of course, these sluts are going to fight, and I am not speaking to these sluts. But I have to say that every time Beck comes into contact with these men, he will consciously or unconsciously show seduce expressions and eyes. The root cause is that she was extremely lacking in the love and protection of male energy when she was a child. Her father took drugs all the year and was unable to give the young beck a normal fatherly love. As a result, she has been moving between various men and her relationships with these men. Nor can it extract any nutrients from writing. On the other hand, Beck can't make herself free in terms of sex. When she doesn't have a boyfriend, she must use tinder to solve the problem of loneliness. From this point of view, she is a person who lacks self-control, so she does not have the necessary conditions to become a writer at all (this may be a small hint planted by the screenwriter from the beginning).
This also explains why she practiced yoga, but in the end she couldn't stop it. Because yoga requires calmness, emptiness, and self-challenge, Beck is full of desires and feels that she will do it as soon as she comes (combined with Joe's steamship). She is eager to pay attention (some kinda of attention whore?) and can't be alone.
She wants to be the most academic one in the celebrity circle, because she is not as good as her friends because of her financial resources, beauty, and family background; she wants to be the most beautiful one in the academic circle, so every time she talks to booksellers, attends classes, and sees The professors are well dressed. Seeing this, I can't help but realize: Ah, this is a writer who is doomed to fail. Because she spends too much time on dressing up and operating social networks, and even repeatedly in the drama she is explaining to others that "I want to write" this matter far exceeds the time she actually writes. If writing is so painful and holding back words like constipation, it only shows that her talent is limited. It can be seen that Peach and the bookseller's evaluation of her was correct. After all, she is a descendant of Salinger, who has a keen sense of literary taste.
she has way too many distracitons, no wonder she failed in the end.
Beck is destined to be a failed writer, because she can't concentrate on writing at all, let alone be alone. As we all know, every famous writer has very strong self-discipline and willpower. Even the Internet writers considered to be "influenced" in China, there are tens of thousands of words better every day.
Her "forced" writing process appeared twice in the play: once when Annika helped her delete social software and unplug the network cable, and the second time was when Joe finally shut her in the basement and let her write with an old typewriter. Seeing this, my hairs are erected. This young man who is extremely dependent on social networks is like us! On the one hand, I think about how I can get ahead in my career and earn a million dollars in annual salary; on the other hand, I still can’t help using all kinds of fragmented time every day to brush up meaningless news, information, and short videos. This extremely contradictory and antagonistic mentality is fully demonstrated in the play.
It can even be said that in the end, if it were not for her death, her book would never sell well. It was precisely because of her death that she had an indecent love with a married psychiatrist. The story itself was strange enough, gossip enough, and bloody enough to make her book easy to sell. To some extent, it can be said that joe helped her realize her dream of being a writer, and joe helped her realize her dream of life, which is ironic enough.
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