Rupert's Xie Li is a bit like Jia Baoyu, but his Grand View Garden is a dusty place, so he is more debauched and unruly, but these two men who grew up in a hotbed of fat and powder can't stand the wind and rain. It is not so much the fault of women's education that it is the inevitable consequence of the imbalanced sex ratio (see if it is the result of a girl growing up among many men), so this tragedy is not accidental.
The hero and heroine of the film changed from their long-standing good feelings, to sex, to emotional dependence, and then to true love in the vindictiveness of temptation, and finally led to a lament of "You hate me for being born late, I hate you for being born early". Obviously, this last emotion is the most precious, and it is also an area less involved in other love movies, but this film failed to grasp this treasure, but wastes most of its space on clichéd love, or in other words, in the previous plot. It's really a pity that this kind of embarrassing emotion was not penetrated.
Michelle's emotional line towards the end of the film elevates the film a bit in the viewer's mind. Thinking of her crying in "Sex, Love, Hamburger", I can't forget it after watching it once. This is a rare beauty with acting skills. Now the beauty is late, but she is still surprised and gratified by her comeback. It's just that since her comeback, Michelle has been playing this kind of woman who wants to seize the tail of youth and keep pity on herself. It would be better to take on some old woman roles in a comedy style like Streep's often played in the past two years. It's fun to play, isn't it? Maybe they will break out into a new world and get the little golden man who may have been indulged long ago.
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