Juliette is still beautiful, and many scenes feel girlish.
The performance of the two heroines is amazing. The doctor is a doctor, not a friend. Although her expression seems to have been completely brought into the story, she can still give a rational analysis. It's just that the act of going to someone privately in the end doesn't feel very professional, or that I have already sensed the danger of the heroine and don't want to continue to deal with this patient. But is it good for Claire to tell her that Alex isn't dead? Absolutely not. What she emphasized was that she was abandoned, and that Alex's death might have made her feel that someone was willing to die for her, and she could still feel valued. But once he knew that the man he loved so much would marry someone else and have children in a blink of an eye, wouldn't he be abandoned again? At the end of the credits, I can say that I'm not surprised that Clary calls Alex, after all, if she doesn't, she might be the one who will die (suicide).
In fact, Juliette has always been in a dominant position. After all, a university professor's IQ will not be too low. Starting with a series of lies to the psychiatrist, her entire treatment is to get what she wants from her own perspective. Does she want to be healed? Not necessarily, she just needs someone to listen to her story. Juliette's acting is really good, it's too difficult to associate her with the role of "Prague Love" in this movie, that's what it's like to act.
The whole film also explores a lot of social issues:
1. Can women still have love when their faces age? Love others and love yourself.
2. How to regulate the acquisition and use of data in the Internet era?
3. The mental health of modern people.
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