We will applaud and cry for Rachel in the movie, but if we encounter such a thing in life, we may recruit soon, and if we meet a person like Rachel, I am afraid it will be a headache. Such a muscle, so unreasonable. This is a very interesting and sad thing. We all want to be heroes in movies, but in reality we often choose to be mediocre, or even those who don't understand heroes and call heroes stupid. Take this film as an example, we could be Rachel's husband, or her newspaper's lawyer, or anyone who doesn't understand her and persuades her to "speak up." Principles, beliefs, just talk like this, if you give up what you can't eat, you won't lose anything.
Since we talk about loss, we must talk about value. The value of a thing depends not only on how much we are willing to pay to get it, but also how much we are willing to pay not to lose it. This standard, concrete like cars and houses, and abstract like principles and beliefs, applies. Rachel is willing to give everything to stick to her principles, and her principles are priceless. It is easy to understand a man who perseveres for his own house, but it is less likely to understand a man who is tormented for his own principles. But if you don't understand, you don't understand, we should express my respect. We have the right to choose to be mediocre, but don't call those we don't understand stupid, they are probably heroes beyond our understanding. Yan Que is aware of Honghu's ambition, and Yan Que should not make fun of and slander Honghu's ambition.
Kate Beckinsale put on a great show. Rachel's stubbornness, fear, hesitation, and determination are all presented through her eyes and her subtle facial expressions. Congrats to her, her vase is finally filled with beautiful flowers.
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