The Invisible Woman's Hong Kong and Taiwan translations are relatively straightforward, and they all put the sisters in the title. Although there is no suspense, it has less flavor. The main poster is also anxious and very straightforward, for fear that others will not understand the plot. Probably the Brazilian character, direct and casual. Technically, it is also more casual, how to please the eye. A bit designed except for the fish tank and red phone, but it feels hypocritical. One is a little rough, and the other tells the story of feminism in the 1950s on the other side of the world. These elements have little appeal other than head-scratching. But the movie is very good-looking, and it can make people enter the play and follow the director's emotions. Because of pain. It hurts a lot, the pain of having sex for the first time, the pain of having a baby, the pain of throwing a child, the pain of getting cancer, and the pain of being kicked out of the house with a big belly, and the pain of being trapped by a child and losing your dreams. Lots of close-ups to show these pains. The audience may not care what happened to these two sisters, but they will definitely be stung by these pains. As long as it hurts once, it will be in the play later, and then I want to continue to hurt, and then I am brought into the emotion. Birth, old age, sickness and death are just appearances, and the suffering inside can make people hurt. regardless of time and race. Pain is one of the common languages of human nature.
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