Well-deserved "cold"

Theron 2022-10-08 04:48:28

Halfway through, I couldn't help looking at my watch and wanted to leave temporarily, but I couldn't help but endure it. From the very beginning, the scene of picking up people at the train station and the background music at that time were very depressing. Before the final blowout, everything seemed overly bland. There is no conflict, or the inner conflict is well covered up.

Look all the way, frown all the way. I don't know if the novel is different from some of the previous explanations/implications in the movie, I have been trying to make myself not so disgusted with the actions of two so-called poor women, and I have been thinking about a famous Chinese saying, "The poor There must be something to hate, and there must be something pitiful for the hateful.” However, the more you look behind, the more you can't bear it, you don't need to bear it anymore, hate is hate.

Too cold, too calm. Except for a few times to cover up her dyslexia and had more "intense" emotions (take out her locked book to compare the pronunciation of words, argue to the host why she couldn't complete the task of finding documents, etc.), other times Sophie It is plain, neither laughing nor sad nor angry. Oh no, she would laugh. The first time I went to Jenny's house as a guest, the two wentssip about each other, one killed their daughter and the other killed their father. When he said it, he didn't feel any guilt, guilty conscience, or fear. Instead, he smiled indifferently and said that there is insufficient evidence to convict him. After talking, they were lying on the bed together and squeaked their armpits, laughing so much that I felt terrified for no reason.

If you insist on class, I just want to say that in any group, there will inevitably be one or two mouse shits. I have nothing to say about this or two rat shit. (I also seem to be a little "cold" thinking this way, smiling face)

When I watched it, I was always uncomfortable. I tried to put myself in the role of Sophie. I can't understand, maybe I'm not lonely enough, so I really can't understand, how can a "bad friend" like Jenny become a "good friend" with her (or not so good, just close)? Sophie's attitude seems ridiculous to me. At first, I would still feel sympathy for Sophie, is this person being led astray? People close to the ink. But after seeing it, I found that these two people just have similar smells. Jenny is obviously annoying, but Sophie doesn't care. Jenny's little goodwill when shopping for chocolate pie at the supermarket was shattered the next moment in my opinion. Jenny asked Sophie if she wanted to go to church to do a good deed, and said that doing some laundry (forgot whether it was laundry or not, anyway, it was what Sophie would do as a maid) made her feel useful and so on. What the hell! Sophie is a maid, and she wants to do this kind of work. Who does it for others (except her parents and relatives) not to make money. Jenny said this without any malice? Not to mention later. All kinds of instigating how bad the master's family is, all kinds of unfounded anger. Even open letters and packages without permission. Accidentally learned that after the owner went out, he directly entered the room to visit, and even took away the owner's things (I always wondered if she returned the book in the end), which is completely the act of a child, not to mention an adult who has already left for work. ? Poverty is not an excuse here, it's personal misbehavior, and it makes me sick to watch. Bringing Sophie to the door to collect donated clothes but spoofing it (partially agree with Jenny's point of view), she was complained that she had no regrets. Ask Sophie to provide her with gossip about the host. Over and over again, he sneaked in regardless of the master's opinion. In the end, he did all the bad things that night. He went to the master's room to destroy it, and finally killed him directly.

I didn't like Jenny's rude behavior, but I also didn't like Sophie's silence about it, and the silence that followed. To be silent means not to oppose or resist, that is, to tacitly agree. Jenny is not a good person, and Sophie is not a good person (don't want to use the word good person, but just want to describe them simply and crudely). I have been trying to find a reason for them to escape, but I have no way of knowing if they were abused in childhood, if there is some deep psychological shadow, or something else, which makes them completely disgusted with me now (what do others think? I don't care about them). The face is ugly without knowing it, and it doesn't matter. One is jealous and one is deeply inferior. When others live a good life, they arrange how many dirty things others have done behind their backs. Others show kindness to her, but being threatened is considered unnecessary sympathy. Maybe they were hurt too much, so they couldn't bear a little warm kindness (for example, the owner's daughter repaired the car that broke down on Jenny's road, but Jenny's attitude at that time was obvious to everyone, I don't want to complain).

Peace of mind is really important. It seems that poverty and suffering sometimes make a person and sometimes destroy a person/group of people.

When I watched it, I was also anxiously thinking, are there any friends like Jenny around me, maybe their behavior is not so good, but I deliberately ignore them? Thinking about it, there used to be one or two, but not anymore. I sighed with emotion at the time, but fortunately, I finally couldn't bear to distance myself (of course, this does not mean that I am a good bird).

He is a person who believes more and more that art comes from life. So after watching this movie, I really feel a lot of anxiety. Need to slow down.

(The above comments are only for this film. If you think that the poor class finally could not help oppressing the rich class, you can move to see the battle of wits and courage between Cinderella, her mother, sister and sister and her future mother-in-law. Story, although Cinderella is not a real poor man. If it’s not enough, you can go out and turn left to read a contemporary novel in which the overbearing president fell in love with me, and the heroine struggled hard and finally lived a happy life with the president)

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Extended Reading

La Cérémonie quotes

  • Georges Lelievre: [referring, respectively, to Sophie the illiterate maid and Jeanne the nosy postal clerk] What a pair: one can't read at all, and the other reads our mail.

  • Man at Melinda's birthday party: Speaking of quotes, I have one that's less famous, but quite troubling. "There are aspects of good people I find loathsome, least of all the evil within them."

    Woman at Melinda's birthday party: My God... Who said that?

    Georges Lelievre: Nietzsche.