A rock star is at least more reliable than an artist

Madalyn 2022-03-23 09:02:55

I read a book of "Andy Warhol's Philosophy" a few years ago, and the photo on the cover made me stare at it again and again - this is also a strange thing, like when you see a beautiful woman, I can't help looking at it all the time, and seeing an ugly person has the same effect. Although I hate myself for seeing such ugly things every time I look at it, I still can't help it. Andy Warhol's cover photo is just that.

I forgot what the book was about until I watched the movie, turned it over again, and found the "taxi girl" in the book, which is also Eddie in the movie. The whole movie seems to be about Eddie, and even Eddie himself is telling it in the form of a documentary, but from the beginning to the end, it is impossible to see what she thinks. I think, until she died, it was still a mystery in everyone's memory.

An ugly person's mentality is often distorted. Of course, some people achieve their careers by distorting their mentality, such as artists. Of course, it can't be said that Eddie's death is entirely on Andy Warhol's head. Andy Warhol was a selfish and indifferent person, but Eddie's life was his own choice.

Compared with Andy Warhol, Bob Dylan is like an angel, handsome and full of tenderness, brilliant and deep. This story tells us that a rock star is at least more reliable than an artist. haha~


View more about Factory Girl reviews

Extended Reading
  • Jane 2022-03-20 09:02:29

    sienna miller is really amazing.

  • Hugh 2022-03-24 09:03:07

    Only see the outside, not the inside biography

Factory Girl quotes

  • Edie Sedgwick: To me, New York was Jackson Pollock sipping vodka and dripping paint onto a raw canvas.

  • Billy Quinn: How did a nice chick like you get mixed up in the whole acting racket?

    Edie Sedgwick: Breakfast at Tiffany's. You know, Audrey with her hair pulled back, and she's smoking through the black cigarette holder.

    Billy Quinn: You wanna live in a movie?

    Edie Sedgwick: I never saw the movie, just the poster.

    Billy Quinn: So you haven't read the book then?

    Edie Sedgwick: Well, Audrey isn't in the book.

    Billy Quinn: The book is a bit different. It's about a working girl and a writer, an artist. You see, the artist steals the girl's stories and makes a fortune, and the girl doesn't get anything.

    Edie Sedgwick: Why do you have such a problem with Andy?

    Billy Quinn: Because of what he worships.