However, a few minutes into the story, we start to get caught up in the plot. Strong psychological cues are paired with tense music to achieve a scalp tingling effect without the need for blood. The constant pursuit of the past that we do not want to face may reflect the heart of each of us. In the shot, the heroine's mother doesn't need soundtracks, no stunts, just a smiling expression that makes you feel terrified enough. The tightly edited picture is enough to make you follow the plot and be unable to control yourself. The director has the courage. She can make Sophie Marceau's face distort and change in the camera until it becomes Monica Bellucci, thank God he is a Women, if they are men, do not know who has the courage to face the French people.
The screenplay written by Marina de Van may only be fully understood and filmed by herself, but the slightly obscure plot may only be fully strung into a story when the film is finished. Even so, it is necessary to After the film, it takes a lot of scrutiny to understand why one person's face changes to another.
Apart from the story itself, the film left me perhaps more of a sense of loss. The zooming in of the camera and the constant close-up of the face make us infinitely emotional, and the face changes brought about by the passage of time. Under the slightly loose skin, the beautiful woman of Sicily becomes the eternal back, and we can only think of the once magnificent Monica Bellucci in our nostalgia.
View more about Don't Look Back reviews