Enough said this movie has a charm for me. The author has a bad habit of always guessing the development of the plot. I opened the film by accident and enjoyed her without collecting any information. The plot arrives at Eva giving Marianne a massage, and when Marianne tells her about her ex-husband's bad habits, she has already guessed the relationship between the three. Whenever this time, I will involuntarily press the fast-forward button. But Enough said is an exception. She spoke in a eloquent manner, as if dog blood was no longer dog blood, and I was not just concerned with the plot, but Eva's gradually changing state of mind and the plain, true love between them. Eva's reaction was that of a real ordinary person. On the one hand, she liked Albert, and on the other hand, she was curious about Albert's bad habits that she didn't know about. This led to the ambivalence of why she didn't cut off contact with the poetess and make it clear to Albert. Gradually, when a person is blindly taught how bad the other person is, many things that he didn't care about at the time become something he cares about, or even hates. Eva wanted to tell Albert that she wanted to cut off the relationship with Marianne as the main customer, but the curiosity and dark side in the woman's heart made her try to use Marianne's lack of friends as an excuse to maintain the relationship between the three. As Albert's daughter said to Eva: "He is just really, really like you." Eva cried and said to her: "I am just really, really like him." Because love will seek, care, deceive ,pretend.
But this is life, there are no big storms, no matter how much I want to save it and want to be together again, because all kinds of things can't take this step. Just like Eva driving to stay in front of Albert's house, consider, just like Albert said: "sometimes I drive by your house, too."
Middle-aged life, plain and full of tolerance. It is precisely because of this that we truly understand the true meaning of life, the truth of marriage, and the meaning of a partner.
Enough said.
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