It should be said that no one has not seen her in front of the camera, whether it is covering the skirt that was blown up by the wind The pendulum is still any picture, with her blond hair, red lips, and black moles. It's like, no one doesn't know her, and after that, no one like her again.
When I was about twelve or thirteen years old, I dug out a black and white film of her, and she didn't appear in the film for the first ten minutes, so I repeatedly checked whether the film was wrong. Later, someone said that if a film has not appeared in the first ten minutes, then it is undoubtedly a failure. But it happens that this statement does not hold true in Marilyn Monroe's films. She seems to be able to break all the stereotypes. No restrictions are her style. It can also be said that she can change all the rules.
So, according to common sense, I have not seen her films. I have only seen Audrey Hepburn's Roman Holiday and Tiffany's Breakfast in the black and white films of 20th century Hollywood. When I was a senior in high school, I read a biography about her in a bookstore by chance, about her getting married when she was fifteen years old, and then shooting that group of photos in order to survive, which was later made into a color photo color nude calendar. I didn't want to know her mood anymore. As an Asian woman, the word Hollywood's elegance always seems to have a derogatory connotation in the subconscious. Compared with the elegant and dignified women of Audrey Hepburn who I like, she always has smart and clear eyes in front of the camera. And Marilyn Monroe her coquettish peerless can not always be on the stage of elegance. But after watching "My Week with Monroe", I am willing to abandon or even spurn all the previous concepts.
The evaluation of actress Michelle has always been mixed, and the louder the debate, the more you can see everyone's love for Marilyn. If you can't achieve her, you'd rather not have her. But Michelle's performance can give three and a half stars in my heart, but compared to Marilyn Monroe, I think I can only give zero stars. Because Marilyn is irreplaceable, everyone can play her, but no one is like her. Her fragility, her kindness, her helplessness, her innocence. God made a mistake, and the mistake was to give her a kind and pure heart with such an incomparable and beautiful body. If she didn't look like that, just an ordinary American woman, maybe she would be a good mother and a good wife, she would tell her little daughter "you are so beautiful and beautiful".
Regarding the Marilyn performed by Michelle, I think it is possible to reproduce a plump, intimate Marilyn. She saw her husband's letter sad and crying in the hallway, she didn't know why all the people she thought were right turned out to be wrong in the end. I don't think she understands how her love pressures Miller as a regular male writer, maybe she just wants the people she loves to love her too. But Miller couldn't do it, or he didn't have that ability. No one doesn't love Marilyn, but who really has the ability to love her and protect her. There are also men who will say that she does not need protection, she is strong enough.
After watching the video, my friend and I were talking, I don't know why she can have a husband, but she can continue to seek love in others. Under the influence of the traditional education of the Celestial Kingdom, even if I accept new ideas, I will still mix it with "disrespectful" even if I accept new ideas, even if I don't have the heart to talk about her like that. But then I thought about it, maybe because of her lack of childhood, her vulnerability and sensitivity, her mental problems, so that no matter what flashes of light or powerful men she wandered around, she could never find a sense of belonging and existence. Like a expelled person, she was expelled from the world. Only then will she find love around different men, maybe it's not love, it's just the love between anyone, family, friendship, partners cherish each other, regardless of the love between men and women.
So there will be Johnny Hyde, Arthur Miller, Paula, or President Clinton.
She and 23-year-old Colin Clark, she needed him, at that time. Her husband is not around, questioning and denying herself. Whether it was visiting Windsor Castle, she mischievously said "I'm going to look like Marilyn Monroe" and then showed her amorous waist and eyes to the people present, or at Clark School, being scolded by young boys Surrounded by, kindly teasing and obsessed with the kiss of the little boy, she has been standing in the crowd, but she is far away from them. She hesitated, bewildered, wondering if she was Marilyn Monroe or the Norma Jane Baker from the adoption center as a child, or herself without a name.
As a woman, I think everyone wants to be her, but no one wants to be her.
She is brave and learns to love herself in disappointment after disappointment, even if she does something bad.
She doesn't hide it. When she finds that the script conflicts with her own thoughts and confuses her, she asks kindly and expresses her thoughts directly.
She is kind and gives everyone, regardless of class, identity, time field and place, the iconic smile, you can't see any falsehood and mixed interest in that smile. Without makeup, I apologized for my bad state and my assistant, and sincerely praised the boss's wine in the bar.
You can see her smile, her sweet voice, and her careful coquetry after she apologizes.
But you never see her again
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