Wednesday night movie viewing in the school's standard screening room. The rhythm in the front is slightly delayed, the literary nature is higher than the film, the voice-over seems to be speaking from pictures, and there is no interest in Christianity, which is a bit boring. From the moment Babette proposed to prepare a French feast, it looked good, the rhythm of the audio-visual language was right, a lot of panning shots, beautiful and coherent. The contrast of skirmishes and reactions is especially humorous. Although the characters appear abruptly, the character creation in the restaurant scene is remarkable.
I really liked the climax at the end. A good movie needs useless crap. Artists are never poor. Yes. Use no.
I can feel that the main creator's expression of religion is more than enough, and the expression of religion in the film has always been a problem. I don't really appreciate the expression of religion in this one and Peony. Maybe Christians would like it better. In the future, I may pay more attention to such movies and make some vertical comparisons.
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