I watched this movie on site b. Watching the bullet screen at station b will directly affect my judgment, because this is really a beautiful work.
I don't know who the Dousen who frequently swipes the bullet screen is, I only know that he is too suitable to play such a ruthless man. He was so cruel and indifferent, but there were tears in his eyes, which made people feel that he was in so much pain.
When I saw the name of the blue deep sea before, I didn't give much interest to see it. Fascinated after seeing it. The low sound of the cello in the background, along with the window sill shot that appeared at the beginning of the picture, the heroine Hester was depressed at this time, and the indoor picture was once very dark. But the faint outline of the light makes the atmosphere and the picture look beautiful. Hester chose to commit suicide at the beginning of the picture, which increased the urge to continue watching the plot.
Hester was a beautiful young woman who had married the first man who proposed to her, a judge much older than her. Marriage did not bring her happiness, but for Hester, who pursued passion, her husband could not bring her sensual passion. (It's very subtle in the movie here, Hester says that her husband can't bring her himself.) Later, by accident, she falls in love with the first Air Force pilot to woo her, Freddie. Freddie's young life attracted Hester. The passionate lust of the two makes Hester feel something that has never been done before, and she falls deeply in love with Freddie. After the husband found out, although he was very angry, he was also very evasive. He did not agree to the divorce and did not see his wife again. Hester and Freddie live on the second floor of an apartment with peace of mind. Emotions brought on by brief sensuality did not last long for joy. With the end of the war, all of Freddy's life also ended with the war, or stayed at the time of war forever. Hester slowly discovered the spiritual gap with her lover. She likes literature and appreciates oil paintings, but Freddie disdains these literati painters and maintains contempt for paintings. The family income is also very low, and the rent is often in arrears. The two had few spiritual topics, and such a life made Hester very contradictory and painful. That's why the scene that begins Hester's suicide. The most sad part of the picture is probably the last scene, and it is also the scene that made me cry. Freddie unexpectedly learned that Hester was going to commit suicide for him. This kind of love made both of them suffer, and immediately decided to separate them from now on. And Hester gave Freddy all her love. Their conversation on the indoor sofa should make everyone who has ever been in love very sentimental.
The film is actually very low-budget and mostly shot indoors. The exterior scene is also only the station and the bar. But that's what makes me feel good. The eye-to-eye dialogue of everyone, the music in the background, and the hazy oil painting texture of the picture bring people's emotions to the extreme. There are also some fragmented images of the war, the songs that people gathered to sing after the war, the crowd in the tunnel, and the charred ruins next to the house, all implying the emptiness of the world after the war. The oil painting texture of the picture is really great. Although Shiver Sen is very bad in it, his eyes are really in place. The heroine's posture, dress and expression are fascinating. The most beautiful part is their bed scene. The director took a 360-degree rotation from the top, and the camera stopped every time. It can be said that the limbs presented are really beautiful.
View more about The Deep Blue Sea reviews