Poverty, even in comedy, is vulgar and tedious.
As Fanny Brawne, the fate of being able to hold Mr. Keats's letter to marry and have children until old age and death should be 10,000 times better than the ending of "a lover gets married".
Even if Keats wasn't so short-lived, he ended up with fame and a negligible chance of marrying a beautiful woman. Because he always only believed that he was an incompetent loser, and his cowardice and indecision in character made me give up hope for their happy ever after ending. And this fatal flaw makes viewers frown at the prospect of whether they will be able to devote themselves to a down-to-earth life after their passion.
Many people think that Fanny is a secular woman who is well-fed and well-fed, but she at least said "I will do everything for you". I don't care whether she will regret it in the end, but this is very important for the survival of men in that era. It takes a lot of courage for a woman.
As a high-quality bitter lover, Keat failed to sublimate his soul in the end even though he got true love. He saw the hope of life again, and thus gained confidence in his talent. He just kept falling into a deeper level of inferiority and self-pity, and this weak mentality was probably the only nutrient for this poetic fantasy love.
Fanny has no shortage of suitors, she is just the beautiful ornament in the arms of the men at the ball. And Mr. Keat, for poor Mr. Keat, she is an irreplaceable bright star, shining on all his fantasies about love and women. She loves him, but what she loves more is the instinct to illuminate and save his presence at all costs. But it is undeniable that all this is just her sacred wish when she embroidered flowers and drank tea in her boudoir.
And she did awaken his creative soul, writing some of the most moving love letters and sonnets more poignant than Shakespeare and Milton in centuries.
This bright star is only a fleeting meteor in the end. The pessimistic Keats has already said that he would rather be with you as a butterfly for three days, than fifty years of mediocrity in the world. So he chose three days, she chose fifty years.
So who is the real Bright Star.
View more about Bright Star reviews