"Flower Cafe": It has nothing to do with cafes and horses

Kristina 2022-03-24 09:03:22

It seems like two separate stories, and they seem to be talking about the same kind of thing—patients with Down syndrome. A story took place in Paris in 1969. A mother did not hesitate to leave her husband to raise her son with Down syndrome alone. All kinds of hardships and hardships can be imagined. Another story takes place nowadays, a grown man tries his best to keep the family together. At first glance, the man's story may seem unrelated to the mother's story, but the two stories go hand in hand with each other. The digital imprint on the man seemed to suggest that he, too, had Down syndrome. However, it is difficult to find men with Down syndrome symptoms.

In addition, the film also engaged in many irrelevant fragmented dramas, dynamic music, tricky witches, and metaphors such as twin flowers. In a word, this is a movie that seems a bit tedious, sometimes clear, sometimes blurred, and even can't see what the director wants to express. Maybe the director wants to express too much, and the temperament is too literary and artistic, and it is difficult for a while. Figure out. However, looking at the beautiful scenery and listening to the soundtrack seems to be a muddled enjoyment.

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Extended Reading

Café de Flore quotes

  • Antoine Godin: If it's a soulmate, it's not supposed to end, right? It doesn't happen twice in a lifetime.

  • La médium: The meeting of twin flames is when the soul finds its other half on the path homeward, to the source.The cycle of reincarnation ends. It's the final relationship that leads to unity.