I think this is a good movie. It pokes me at many points. It is very realistic but not lacking in warmth. The beauty is always there.
First of all, the director is very good at telling stories, and the cause and effect are clear. At the end of the turn, you find that Tully is just a split-off young heroine. If you think back to the previous plot, all the foreshadowings are so obvious and obscure. To tell you the truth, the first half of the movie is really anti-marriage and anti-children, especially the quick edit. I was anxious and broken when I watched it. This is the charm of a good movie, and the sense of substitution is particularly strong. The husband's morning kiss is really ironic. The contrast with the hostess changing diapers, breastfeeding, washing clothes, barbara, and a lot of things really makes people lose all the beautiful illusions about marriage in an instant. Those fairy tales are just dreams, and life is so often hopeless. A woman who is willing to do your laundry, cook, have children, work hard and get out of shape, and dedicate everything for the family. As a result, my daughter said Mum, what's wrong with your body, and I, a movie-watcher, felt heartbroken, and the impact was too great.
Another point that is very empathetic is that when Tully shines into the heroine's life like a ray of sunshine and she wants to share it with her husband, the husband only plays games with headphones. Charlize Theron's fleeting expression is really good, from expecting a moment of joy to being disappointed and indifferent. It's exactly the same as me. When I want to share and communicate with my parents, I'll give you a cliché that you don't want to hear and understand, or I'll ignore you. , the latter himself lost. So, I'll be silent. When you don't give emotionally, of course it doesn't hurt.
Postpartum depression can be disorienting and schizophrenic, but the ending is good. After the car accident, the heroine was hospitalized. The husband knows everything about the heroine. You can't simply think that he is not good. He really loves her and loves this family. But it all changed later, and shared the trivialities of the family with the heroine, and everyone in the family became better little by little. Although the heroine lives a boring life day in and day out, being bothered by three children all day long, this is the complete family she wanted most when she was young. She now has what she once craved, but the postpartum depression made her doubt herself, and she needed a buffer and self-knowledge to re-accept herself for each new day.
After careful scrutiny, every line has a deep meaning, but I am sure that I will never get married and have children in my life.
View more about Tully reviews