This is a biographical film. Many people have empty comments and do not understand the proposition and expression of the film. Before watching this film, you must know Diane Arbus. Some people call her "Vincent Van Gogh of the photography industry." ". Diane Arbus is the most important standard-bearer of American new documentary photography. She regards the poor, deformed, homeless, transgender, homosexual, nudist, and mentally retarded as her own (normal people) and society (mainstream). The photographic exploration on the back side stubbornly forces us to re-examine "normal" and "abnormal", "moral" and "immoral", "just" and "injustice", "respect" and "violation" Such fundamental issues. It's a good movie to see this movie after knowing Arbus. You can't get out of your own skin and enter someone else's body; someone else's tragedy can never be yours. This is the real Arbus, a paranoid, stubborn artist photography big wet
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