No matter how intense the spark between the two Rachels was and how heart-wrenching the passion scene was, when it came to this movie, it was time to take the "same-sex" label off. This is a proposition that has nothing to do with gender, and has nothing to do with religion or belief. Even in my opinion, the film until the end is a tragedy for the two heroines. The form of this tragedy is today, Human beings cannot be separated from their own pattern, and they are still in the fate of being "given", just because in a more traditional Jewish community, this "passivity" is particularly obvious.
At first, from the beginning of the main feature of this film, I thought it would be a gay sadomasochism bound by free love and religion in contemporary society, but as long as there is a label of "homosexual", the relationship will always be expected to be convoluted and decisive. So much so that at the end of the film, the expectation for a romantic film was swept away. Whether there is love between the two heroines is actually not mentioned in the whole film, but the two girls in the Jewish community have the same rebellious mentality, and the love between childhood sweethearts may not be easily revealed because of a person's adolescence." "Girl" love, there is an attempt at "sex" between two people, the result of this attempt is unknown, but after many years, Rachel McAdams, who has been married to a woman, never fell in love with a woman again. , The love is still there, but it is impossible to escape the cage of growth. And Ronis, who returned from New York, fulfilled the life of Rachel McAdams who never left the community.
This is the first time the film fulfills the words of the dead priest at the beginning, the right of choice and the consequences of choice. And the tragedy of this film is also at this time. Ronise's choice is not free. For the people in the community and her father, this choice is a kind of betrayal. This kind of betrayal may be traced back By the time she left the community, maybe she didn't leave because of her freedom, maybe her freedom also came. As for Rachel McAdams, her choice is like many Jewish women in the community. She regrets her past, compromised, and rebelled. In the end, all these emotions will be attributed to life itself. Life is human. Inescapable pain, and pain is her ordinary daily life.
So, these are two women who are looking for real freedom, and their self-imposed choices have not allowed them to achieve real freedom. Going to New York, for so many years, the contradiction has turned into a primitive beast.
I have to say, that passionate scene was really urgent and sudden. We are still looking for another self in our life, the one who lives the life we thought we had, or, what we are looking for is the past that was lost in our life at some point in time, and there is only one person who can prove the past. They found it, and they fled the Jewish community hand in hand, in the streets that the trams crossed, in the alleys where passersby passed, in the small rooms of a hotel, in a world far from their own life, pouring out the primitive desires of the beasts. This desire, which has nothing to do with love, is for mutual comfort, search and reconciliation.
Ronis kept persuading her to go, but never invited her to go with her until she became pregnant.
Maybe it was the newborn that gave a woman the courage to be a mother. Rachel McAdams went from just wishing her close friend would stay to wanting to go, and Ronise was obsessed with her father's memorial service until finally, They are both trying freedom, freedom to be forgiven, freedom to be exiled. This is the most tragic part of the whole film.
They are still praying to the priest for freedom.
In the end, they were given freedom.
The only one who really violated the fate of life is the newborn.
(Besides, if you watch it as a lily film, you really need to make up a lot of things in your own brain. Of course, it's very exciting.
(Don't invite family members, if you look at Panorama, the breath is real, and it doesn't show my screaming heart in front of my mother.
(Love both Ms. Rachel
(The priest is also very pitiful, but the priest can't violate the will of God to love everyone, the priest is the real Jack Sue
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