Both girls have to use a "lifestyle" to escape and rebel against the existing life.
Whether it's Rococo or beasts, it requires expensive clothes, expensive hand embroidery, modified motorcycles...
But this "lifestyle" to complete self-realization is also very likely to step into the endless consumption trap to feed the "lifestyle". Then I keep making money to support the "lifestyle", forgetting that it should be an escape, a escape, a resistance, a self-realization.
In the end, the ending of the film forcibly dispels this "consumer life". One can embroider, and the other learns to repair cars. With stunts and good looks, he has become the "master of life".
But now the biblical status of this film in the circle of lounging mothers is really a bit embarrassing. What youth films want to show is to get rid of and resist, not that Rococo clothes are so beautiful, I also want to learn embroidery.
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