Originally, it was aimed at Benedict's tender little face, but he was so shocked that he couldn't fall asleep without writing this film review in the middle of the night.
From the very beginning, listening to Teacher Tang's hoarse voice in BC's slightly red eyes, I began to wonder, shouldn't this show be taking the easy route?
Then the story starts from the beginning.
Stuart, played by Mr. Tang, is a man with muscle atrophy who smokes, drinks, has various addictions, street violence, and has been in prison 35 times. Stuart walks stiffly like a monster. It can be said that everyone hates people like this, but he gives me the feeling that it is very simple, because he is very good at seeing. Mr. Tang's acting skills broke out frequently in his rewinding life. He always walked in a very strange way in order to bring out the symptoms of Stuart's muscle atrophy. Alexander's desire to study the feelings of people at the bottom of the story is vivid and incisive, and his expression is a little interesting but not hard to see contempt, which makes me very enjoyable to watch.
Their first confrontation was in the Cambridge conference room, and Stuart really gave me a very subtle feeling when he challenged the proposer sitting on stage with the message "I'm just drunk" all over. I always thought that this light-hearted drama was just about the life of a homeless person, and the question raised by Stuart hit the nail on the head. His first impression on me was amazing. And Alexander, like the development of the plot, became interested in this "tramp".
Then I followed Alexander to see Stuart's entire life.
Stuart is not a smart person who should give up on himself. He will make suggestions to the dark crowd under the stage, and then yell at the patrol police when he protests outside for the night. He would tell Alexander that writing a book could be done by way of backtracking, but naively and slowly, he spoke English that he could not understand in English with his own strange pronunciation. He always has some business solutions in his mind that he thinks may be very profitable, but he suffers from the fact that everyone is unwilling to help him. He would patiently cook a pot of curry and express his opinion that these tastes are not suitable for him in a cute tone. He's not the "crazy" he describes himself at all.
Then, I saw him break out. I was frightened when Stuart was covered in blood and screamed and struggled in the house assigned to him by the government. His voice was not as sharp as usual. He smashed all the furniture and stabbed himself with a knife. Imagine that he is dealing with his own body. As if, as if he was sick of the body.
Stuart calls such himself the Midnight Mist, a condition he also cannot control or foresee.
And Alexander slowly unearthed the truth of everything there.
During his tragic childhood, he was sexually abused by his own brother and his classmates. He was finally able to go to the children's home to escape, but he did not expect to fall into another tiger's mouth, a hypocrite priest.
I have always believed that a person's childhood has an immeasurable impact on his life.
I am more certain of my point of view before this.
However, Stuart inadvertently told me, while shaking his tie, that it wasn't because of his childhood.
He dressed himself carefully for his sister's wedding, and then told Alexander that everyone couldn't put their own depravity on one thing.
He just couldn't accept the fact that he was dead.
He was only nine years old when his brother sexually assaulted him, and he couldn't like himself any more.
But the appearance of Alexander undoubtedly brightened his dark life.
Although Alexander initially approached him for an impure purpose, he was only from a side-by-side perspective.
Probably Alexander himself did not expect that he would gradually be attracted to Stuart.
On the day Stuart was acquitted by the court,
they celebrated with champagne on the street, jumping and hugging everyone;
when Stuart's heart was successfully installed with a pacemaker,
he received the call with a look of reassurance Smile.
I found that I just knew that Alexander was happy and relieved.
Stuart dies while I'm happy that Stuart and Alexander will be friends forever, this is the best drama I've ever seen, and
Alexander is a little bit proud of himself for helping a now-acquainted friend out of the dark
.
He is said to have been involved in a traffic accident and accidentally hit a train leaving Cambridge at 11.15.
I would rather he chose to commit suicide because he hated the world too deeply and couldn't get rid of it,
rather than the so-called "traffic accident" or "unacceptable warmth" or some kind of ragged reason,
if he hates that, at least he hasn't done anything to him yet. He sees life too thoroughly,
but he doesn't hate the society he lives in. He clearly sees his slowly changing line.
So he chose to leave with nine-year-old Stuart after experiencing sobriety.
The film ends with Alexander listening to the tape that Stuart had recorded for him, followed by the closing of the prologue.
Stewart: Turn your life upside down.
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I wrote it a long time ago and now I plan to post it.
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