Riding the wind and breaking the waves eventually

Jalyn 2022-03-27 09:01:09

My favorite of John Carney's trilogy.
The director has captured the various emotions of adolescence in a very delicate and sincere manner, the broken family, the tactful first love, and the rock-and-roll dream insisted on for the goddess, all of which are excellent. When the heroine was crying when I heard the demo, I would resent why I couldn't give more to the people and things I liked at that time.
I like this film because he is real enough, unlike some rock movies that go all the way to the end, when they encounter all kinds of dissatisfaction and grievances in adolescence, just like we used to, most of them endure and compromise silently, but the male protagonist The attitude is to get on with this shit and make some art, the latter half of the sentence shows that some people are really different. And the heroine went to London alone for the model dream and suffered a lot. Fortunately, she did not give up. When they finally got on the broken boat and went to London to pursue their dreams, love also made them extraordinary.
PS: In addition to the beauty of the heroine, her accent is also very charming.

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Extended Reading

Sing Street quotes

  • Raphina: Your problem is that you're not happy being sad, but that's what love is, Cosmo: happy-sad.

  • Brendan: Did the Sex Pistols know how to play? You don't need to know how to play. Who are you, Steely Dan? You need to learn how NOT to play, Conor. That's the trick. That's rock and roll. And THAT... takes practice.