reincarnation of fate

Austin 2022-03-21 09:02:49

I can't think rationally like under the sky in Berlin. This film reflects the social class issues of an era, but I look at this film as if it were pure art or pure appearance.
Howard Manor was originally reserved for Margaret. After many setbacks, it finally returned to her hands. It was because of the greedy and selfish side of human nature that the Wilcox family finally paid more for Margaret. Special got the manor.
Beth and Scribe should be the pair who met the right person at the wrong time, and God doesn't allow them to be together. It should be love at first sight, but it was an afterthought, a helpless one. At the last moment of Bai Si's life, she also vaguely saw the person she loved in her original consciousness, as well as the unfortunate child.
The actions of the eldest son Callis have always been contradictory in the play.

View more about Howards End reviews

Extended Reading
  • London 2022-03-19 09:01:07

    Feminine consciousness and class criticism: Helen’s tit-for-tat confrontation with the owner of Howard Manor and the assistance of the lower-level intellectual Leonard show her sensitivity and resistance to social class opposition, and the fruitless love tragedy with Leonard is the inevitable social status disparity The ending; the differences in personality and behavior between Helen and her sister Margaret can be compared to Elizabeth and Jane in arrogance and prejudice, the conflict and tolerance between modernity and tradition.

  • Talon 2022-03-20 09:02:26

    A rare good film, comparable to Martin's "The Age of Innocence", the details of life are intertwined with class contradictions, and the introverted perspective contains turbulent contrasts of human nature and value judgments on social outlets.

Howards End quotes

  • Margaret Schlegel: [speaking of Helen] I think she may be a little... touched.

  • Margaret Schlegel: Mr. Wilcox, I am demented!