little girl to big heroine

Angela 2022-09-26 08:35:41

I saw the drama by chance, and randomly clicked to watch the first season.

In the first episode, I felt that Little Annie was really talking too much. From the very beginning when she got off the train and saw the adopter, Matthew, she kept talking all the way. Clever is quite clever, but it has become too shaky. When she got home, the hostess asked her what her name was. She made up two random names, and the hostess directly called her to say her real name. Just...just say your real name, okay? The 13-year-old girl is too mature to be afraid of seeing strangers? Even if you are not afraid of meeting for the first time, it is not suitable for this kind of chat. In such a conservative era, it is easy to be regarded as an uneducated and rude child. It may be easier to be accepted as a quiet and well-behaved little girl.

It may be due to the environment of growing up in a mixed orphanage, Annie lacked a sense of security and hoped to be recognized. Even when she later found out that it was a misunderstanding to adopt the boy and planned to send her away, she tried her best to stay. The hostess Marilla gave her a one-week probationary period, but unfortunately she was a little irritable and got into trouble and was sent back. This scene that was not accepted is still quite tearful. She should have been protected by adults at a young age, but she has indeed carried too much, such as being bullied in an orphanage, lonely, and no one taught her to be a human being, thinking she was adopted I can get out of the sea of ​​misery. I didn't expect it to be a misunderstanding or to be sent away.

There must be a turning point, the misunderstanding is resolved, so the second episode is back. Annie's words are many and dense, but some of them are indeed full of imagination, and they are childish "children's words without taboo". Compared with the little friends who grew up in the greenhouse, little Annie did show more insight and firm will than her peers, smart and assertive. The taciturn Matthew may have seen his missing side in her and liked her, trying to protect her despite her mistakes from time to time. The hostess was also persuaded by Matthew, and finally accepted Annie with ease. After all, the siblings still saw their own shadow in Annie.

So the family started a new life, running in each other and trusting each other. Annie started going to school and was ostracized by her classmates. After meeting new friends, starting to socialize, and getting to know other people in the village, the story circle gradually expanded and expanded to the second and third seasons.

The service, stories, lines, and acting skills are all very good, showing the characteristics of a small town era and distinctive characters. Annie's acting skills are good and well controlled. Although the characters are really strong, but usually the characters with the greater contrast with the surrounding environment have more dramatic tension, the rhythm is also tight, and the quality of the completion is good. Single, dependent on each other until old age, Annie has gradually grown into an independent person, and has a love-hate relationship with the little male protagonist, which is a drama worth chasing.

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