The film is very real, so real that it doesn't look like a feature film, but rather like a documentary, recording how the couple went from being a student to the joys and sorrows of marriage. The various clips that are slender and long like a running account are very detailed. The director is very good at controlling the language of the shots. A lot of the passage of time can be clearly expressed through a simple one shot and two shots. Many plot twists and turns make the actor's expression directly allow the audience's own compensation mechanism to complete the meaning. transmission. It's always been hard to like a hand-held film, and the film's photography isn't that good either. Occasionally there are some front and back shots to express the loneliness and alienation in the actor's heart. It's just that such a running-book-style film is shot with such a running-book-style photography method, which is considered a match.
Let's go back to the story itself. When I watched the film, I kept thinking about why they had to be with others as soon as they were separated. I might not have understood it before, but now I feel that this is the only way to make it real.
View more about Like Crazy reviews