In the human world, it would be a luxury to be able to freely bloom with tenderness for a moment.

Asa 2022-11-16 06:02:17

I'm not a fan of British movies, and I don't really like gay themes, but this movie attracted me from the very beginning. It's three parts, and it's nearly three hours, but it's not too long. It

's suitable for anyone. Go see it, if you like suspense stories, if you like the idyllic style of British movies, if you like the beautiful romance of two women, their beautiful bodies in the picture, and what she said to her at the end of the movie, All the words are, how I want you, how, I love you. I

recall the heroine's "pure look like a dove" in my mind, and recall her expression of "London" reciting time and time again. The atmosphere of the story creates a feeling of love.

Human nature is complex, complex enough to write such a wonderful story, complex enough to discuss endlessly for days and nights around such a story.

Someone wrote well in the comments, "Who cares about that?"

Yeah, who cares about the truth behind those conspiracies, and who cares what's right and wrong.

"Full of neuroticism, deceit, laughter, tears, violence, sex," the movie we watched People, but read silently and moved. Real, pure, depicting human nature scene after scene. In

the end, love is also complicated, no longer simply admiring each other, mixed with too many choices and being chosen, freedom and right and wrong, in chaos Wandering.

In the human world, it would be a luxury to be able to freely bloom with tenderness for a moment.

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Extended Reading

Fingersmith quotes

  • Maud Lilly: Please don't touch me, stifle me, smother me... pretend to love me.

    Mrs. Sucksby: Pretend?

  • Richard 'Gentleman' Rivers: [to Maud] You think life is hard with money? You should try it without!