Perhaps it is because it is easier to think than to say, and easier to say than to do, that there are movies and people who go to the movies

Cleve 2022-04-19 09:01:25

As mentioned before, I decided to be someone who can speak up - especially when it comes to boring things. So, I went to the cinema to watch Easy A under

the scorching sun on the big weekend. Should I say it was a new movie just released a week ago or the effect of PG13, in general, there should be only three or two flirting. The screening room is extremely full during the time period when the snarky couples touch and laugh at each other in the dark (this is usually called "not buying a DVD and going home and showing off a P in public places").

Sandwiched between the sweet couple in the front and the 16- or 7-year-old corps behind me, I was shocked to find that a vacuum was formed around me as if covered with an isolation layer... I can still relax in a full movie theater. The luxury of fresh air is always unpleasant... let's

get down to business.

This is a very traditional youth film. Why only youth? The inspirational pinch that usually follows behind? love pinch? The reason why inspiration is removed is because when I was a child, my mother taught me not to lie anytime and anywhere because of sympathy or feel pity. The reason for removing love, uh, if GAY love is very romantic, then I count it in. At least 50 minutes into the movie, I realized that "Oh, so he's a boar!" The guy looks more emotional than the admittedly GAY in the movie.

But that's not to say how bad this movie is, at least you can watch the whole movie with popcorn and Coke without the urge to refund the ticket. Step by step, it tells the story of Oliver (...popeye's girlfriend), a young girl who bravely sold her "virgin" body for love and justice. After a series of misunderstandings and ensuing troubles and accidents, she can no longer bear to face her own life. A story of gossip and attacks, finally confessing a lie and getting true love and the most romantic thing of all dreams - riding a lawnmower on the road. As for what this pure and pure film wants to express, the more I think about it, the more I can't figure it out. Is there such a fuss about being out of high school?

One of the details in the film that caught my attention was the little brother of Oliver (who felt weird how many times he called it). Oliver's family has an adopted brother. Although there is no explanation, it can be seen at a glance that this child is 100% adopted. Why? Because he's a black kid. While this little guy has almost no dialogue—the only few that are used up in the opening skepticism about whether he's been adopted—but the appearance rate is surprisingly high, and almost every time he can earn a close-up of the front- this This kind of treatment is second only to the female pig's feet. Even at a party where the whole family is sitting, the background is not the female pig's feet or the family photo of the parents, but the baby photo of the little guy. Such special treatment shows that the producers are cautious about racial issues and take every step, for fear that this film full of white faces will touch the nerves of some very sensitive people and affect the box office. For comparison, you can refer to Sister Gwyneth's new film Country Song, which was widely criticized because a dark-skinned actor in the trailer did not appear in the film. (But there's no way. They sing country music, not jazz and blues. What do you want the black face of Muduo? It's not like filming "Mei Lanfang", where you should add a few paragraphs of Tibetan for fear of ethnic suspicion. The same dance?...)

Anyway, although this youthful and even absurd story seems a little out of touch with the new era (Ah---!! I use it again! I use the unfortunate word again>_
ps I think the director is GAY.

-Lines-

Librarian: What are you looking for?

Oliver: I'm looking for a Bible.

Librarian: Oh, then you're in the wrong place. The Bible is on the bestseller aisle, next to "Twilight."

View more about Easy A reviews

Extended Reading

Easy A quotes

  • Olive Penderghast: [talking to Marianne] We've had 9 classes together since kindergarten... 10 if you count Religion of Other Cultures, which you didn't, because you called it science-fiction and refused to go.

  • [first lines]

    Olive Penderghast: The rumors of my promiscuity have been greatly exaggerated.

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