——When everyone takes Padman as a hero, who can be the hero of Padman?
This show has really changed the way I see women in India. The ideology is feudal and backward, and he does not fight for himself, but only knows to marry a good husband. It's no wonder that Indian women have a low status. If they don't respect themselves, can they ask others to respect them?
My two stars are for the direction of this plot. Obviously, the ideological realm of the male and female protagonists is not on the same level, and they don't know how they fell in love with each other and what they liked about each other. I think it is the wife's responsibility to support her husband's cause. But this wife not only failed to support her husband, did not understand her husband's love for her, but also left her husband when he was at his worst. Simply stupid. Is it that hard to quietly try a husband's product? Don't you think it's a lot more convenient?
It can be said that the second female is the best match for the male lead. He is simply a virtuous inner helper, and he has the same ideas. In the end, he let go and was very open-minded. He pretended not to care, so that the male protagonist could be a good person with peace of mind. Without the second female lead, there would be no male lead today.
But the male protagonist still gave up such a beautiful, virtuous and kind-hearted female second, and returned to the home where no one understood him. I fucking don't understand the Indian view of family and love when I see it here. The family lover, the villagers sneered and ridiculed when a person failed. In the end, if he succeeded, he was regarded as a saint, and he could understand what he did. Although it was very pitiful for their backwardness, this flattering face was too disgusting.
The male protagonist loves his wife too much, and his love for his wife makes him, who has no culture, insist on making a machine for making pads. The twists and turns made me feel the firmness and greatness of this love. Maybe the second girl likes the beginning and end of the male protagonist, and she sees his firmness in love, and she doesn't want him to change in the end. This love also made him finally choose to return to the family.
I feel like a king with countless bronzes. The male protagonist's thought is a bug in that village. Too hard. Indians may also have to accept the fact that many citizens are ignorant and backward.
Overall, the rhythm of the film is still very light and humorous, and many heart-wrenching links are not so difficult to accept as humor. For example, when the male protagonist tried the pads himself. The film also satirizes that religion is useless at all, and the heroine would rather spend more than fifty dollars on religion rather than buying aunt's towels. And how did those dirty rags, dirt, and leaves catch my aunt's blood? While it was funny, I suddenly found out that my diapers were rags when I was a kid. In the early 21st century, the standard of living in China and India was average. I don't know whether Indians use paper to wipe their butts, or they still wipe their butts with their left hands and eat with their right hands.
I don't know how sanitary napkins are exported to the US and China, it's amazing. The male protagonist's speech in the United States was very attentive, and the writing was very similar to some speeches in the United States. There is a joke to myself and some humor.
Overall, I don't think it's comparable to Wrestling Dad. This movie seems to be a movie made for the sake of making a movie, and like chasing the wind, it combines some elements of India's recent fire movies: women's rights, the state of the country, etc. Very awkward. Anyway, it was filmed, but I felt that it should not be the same thing. For example, how could the heroine be so stubborn and unwilling to help her husband, and all women felt ashamed that their menstrual period was so unreasonable, and finally the hero chose to leave Female two. It can only be said that the things of thought may indeed be difficult to change, and changing the concept of a society needs to be polished all year round.
The male protagonist looks a little European-style.
Weird Indian.
View more about Pad Man reviews