I want to say something.

Lela 2022-03-25 09:01:08

Watched both on and off.
Suddenly choked up. Unable to speak.
want to express something. But like a stem in the throat.
She is really just an ordinary person. A utterly fanatical pursuit of something.
Very unfortunate. This thing is sex. A taboo topic that is extremely open to men but completely closed to women.
Rather it is sex.
Joe finds himself able to pass sex. to connect with others. get in touch.
She recorded the characteristics of each person's name. Record their phone calls.
She tried to stay in touch with them. It was found that there was no way in the end.
All she cares about is sex.
It's like we convince ourselves that this boy is good to us. He has a good job and family background.
We try to record the details of how good he is to himself.
Finally found out. All we care about is feelings.
in this formula. The content in parentheses is different. Makes the equation look completely different.
And what does the author or director want to express?
I seem to be able to get it. But when I think I understand it, I can't understand it.
It feels like a nose that can't breathe when you have a cold.
A small rash on the body from allergies.
White paper that was kneaded and tried to flatten.
The feeling is so real it hurts.
In the end, she still tried to forget to quit the pursuit of her life.
What is it for.
Are you afraid? Is it because of love?

I would also love to know the answer.

View more about Nymphomaniac: Vol. I reviews

Extended Reading
  • Jessika 2021-12-02 08:01:29

    A film about sex addiction reveals a frigid breath and expression throughout the story

  • Cassandra 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    In a convent-like room (the room of an unbelieving Jew with a medieval Madonna), the listener understands mathematics, fishing, and Bach, and the speaker tries to reduce sex to mechanical gratification, to strip it from the vulgar " Love”, sex is hunting for rewards and calculations (she is mechanically skilled), love is the lowest instinct in the heart (longing to be picked up); father in childhood experience equates emotion and beauty, father/plant/leaf (mathematics)/calm

Nymphomaniac: Vol. I quotes

  • Seligman: [narrating] During the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, on horseback, through a singularly dreary tract of country; and at length found myself, as the shades of the evening drew on, within view of the melancholy House of Usher.

  • Young Joe: If I asked you to take my virginity, would that be a problem?

    Jerôme: No, I don't see a problem.