From women's football to men's football

Karlie 2022-03-20 09:01:39

Adapted from Twelfth Night of Shakespeare, it reminds me of the ending of 1998's Shakespeare in love, which uses the name of the film's heroine, Viola. Have a little understanding of what the original is like, this modern adaptation is really good??

The heroine, Amanda bynes, has stopped acting. This is the pinnacle of work. When I watched it, it happened that there was also a TV series called Girls Over Flowers in Taiwan. But this is because the female protagonist's original women's football team is about to be disbanded, and then she breaks up with her boyfriend and decides to disguise herself as a twin brother to play football at the rival team's school.

The movie is very interesting, and the director is very good at finding someone to make it. In particular, this show is strictly a dual male protagonist (duke & Sébastien). After the female protagonist put on the hat, she was told by her brother's girlfriend that they looked exactly the same, so she had a plan to ask her boyfriend Paul to help "become" her brother.

Viola is regarded as a monster in the world of men. She never dared to take a bath until she learned to set the alarm clock to take a shower in the middle of the night, and then pretended to be a playboy and called her two girlfriends as admirers, successfully becoming the "idol" of these male classmates!

In the face of duke likes school beauty Olivia, but she likes duke, but unfortunately Olivia likes her, the difficult triangle officially disintegrates when the real Sébastien appears.

What's interesting is that this play is really loyal to the closed British society of the original book. In the 21st century, there is actually a women's group labeling what a lady is like, and it's in American society! Americans changed British English (even if their ancestors were actually British whites), made American English, American English string method, and even American football, and changed football to succor! In such a historical context, this movie actually has to learn British Lady's Women's Club, is it really fun?

But Viola is feminist. She never agrees with the style of the women's club. She absolutely hates her mother's insistence. That's why she broke up with her boyfriend justin. Later, she wanted to prove that even in the men's football team, she can occupy a seat (Of course, the coach also agreed), she used her ability to prove that everything is for the capable rather than just looking at gender??

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Extended Reading

She's the Man quotes

  • Sebastian: [after falling over on the football pitch again] What am I doing? This isn't FUN.

  • Toby: Is your sister hot?

    Viola: [as Sebastian] Uh... I guess so... she's got a great personality

    Toby: Ew