Bright Star

Abagail 2022-03-24 09:03:40

To put it simply, it looks better than I imagined. I thought it was a boring film, very literary. The picture is unbelievably beautiful (regardless of whether it is a sick sentence...), most of the time, I have no feeling for English poetry, I can't hear where the rhyme is pressed, and I can't tell whether it is good or bad, and my contact is mostly translated poetry. But by the end of the credits, the whole few minutes of "soundtrack recitation" was really good, and Ben's voice was great, and the English accent was very useful. I imagined the poet to be deeper, more unsmiling, and more neurotic, but at the beginning of Keats pulling the door, Fanny almost fell, which pushed me to my imagination. Later, he asked in the rain if he fell in love with Fanny, which made me instantly I felt like I was watching an eight o'clock soap opera, and then I smiled knowingly. There is also the strong sense of harmony between him and Fanny's cat, and after confirming each other's feelings, Fanny's sister is walking in front, and when she turns around, the two of them are like "red lights, green lights, little white lights". A fixed pattern, a very lovely poet, and a very lovely love. Embroidery thread, flower bushes, stationery full of squiggles, Jane Campion's lens, background music sung quietly, poetic or pretentious, whatever you say, it's good. There are conflicts and ups and downs, it is not a boring movie, and it is suitable for nympho, the identification is completed. I don't know what Keats was like in history, and I haven't read much of his poems. I learned it from a junior high school textbook, but I can't remember the poems. I can only remember the small characters in the notes under the book. The poet who died early, the epitaph is Here lies a man whose name was written in water. I like it very much. I'd like to assume he's like that in the movie. Bright star! would I were steadfast as thou art— Bright star! would I were steadfast as thou art— Not in lone splendour hung aloft the night, And watching, with eternal lids apart, Like Nature's patient sleepless Eremite,

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Extended Reading

Bright Star quotes

  • Fanny Brawne: [the night before he leaves] You know I would do anything.

    John Keats: I have a conscience.

  • Charles Armitage Brown: I - failed - John - Keats! I failed him, I failed him! I did not know till now how tightly he wound himself around my heart.