two good places

Dillan 2022-03-25 09:01:22

There are two places that are very well portrayed.
One is that the heroine Fanny got Keats's token of love, and after a ring, with the attitude of being a hostess, she entered Keats's room with integrity, and sat down without saying a word. On the sofa, he began to fiddle with the embroidery he had brought, which angered Keats' friend who had always regarded her as a scourge. The self-righteousness of a woman in love, the silent self-satisfaction without saying a word, is really wonderful, full of female psychology.
There is also the news of Keats' death, Fanny cried like a man. It played really well.
This heroine is the type that gets more and more attractive, and her face is very beautiful. Due to the arrangement of the narrative, the portrayal of Keats is very weak and somewhat unworthy of her.
What I mean by that is that the film is generally mediocre. A lot of people want to complain when I watch it. For example, Fanny went to see Keats' younger brother. Keats' younger brother had hemoptysis, an infectious disease, and was dying. Fanny also asked her sister to go with her, and stayed in a house with no air. It was unfriendly here. Keats was also hemoptysis in the back, and his sister sat on Fanny's lap. Both of them joked with him on Keats' bed. That's okay, because Keats and Fanny were a blatant couple at that time, and they were almost family. . But at the beginning when his brother was about to die, the two were not familiar with each other, let alone her sister, how much friendship could they have. Weird arrangement.

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Extended Reading

Bright Star quotes

  • Abigail: Mr. Brown has said that I could learn to read still. I said to him, "Sure, what would I read?" And he said, "Abigail, even the Bible is not so dull as you might believe," and that in the Songs of Solomon there're some bits so juicy they'd make even a churchman blush. And he said that when I get down to the reading myself, I'll see he tells not one word of a lie!

  • Margaret 'Toots' Brawne: Fanny wants a knife.

    Mrs. Brawne: What for?

    Margaret 'Toots' Brawne: To kill herself.