I am writing to you with a pen, but the pen is stuck on your name, like a rich lady who doesn't know whether to eat Kung Pao Chicken or Mushroom Fried Pork for dinner, I can't put a name in front of your name to satisfy both you and me attribute, you know that there are too many options. Only then did I understand how Fang Hongjian felt when he wrote to Tang Xiaofu, and I could not wait to write it in English, hehe. And then I didn't, I just irresponsibly started the letter with the simplest capital letter. For what reason do I think that I will give you a satisfactory answer when you see this letter, or when you have a chance to read it five or ten years from now.
In the stereo, the Cloud Atlas sextet played in a loop, not the two-minute piano version, but the 8-minute symphony version. Since the main instrument of the piece is the piano, I especially like it. "It's a back-and-forth, it's a thing that's crystal clear." I
went to see the film of the same name based on David Mitchell's novel "Cloud Atlas" today. I have already read one third of this novel. The complex narrative structure, bold ideas, and superb language are the formulas of my works. Of course, to write such a novel, I also need to earnestly learn the common sense of music for two or three years.
The movie was watched in Room 10 of the UME Studios, the giant screen. The screen was so huge that it could reach the sky. In the seventh row, I still felt that Niagara Falls was flowing down three inches from my eyebrows. It wasn't until thirty minutes later that I fully settled into Niagara Falls and sank into the plot. It can be said that this is a beautifully connected but really intricate film narrative. If I didn’t read some relevant introductions in advance, (maybe there are procedures for watching the film, such as whether it is necessary to read the relevant novels in advance to understand the relevant plots, etc., I have not been able to grasp it well. This degree, I love freshness, so I would rather enjoy the gorgeous visual violence in the fog, but sometimes I can’t help but think about watching the movie after reading the novel, so that the movie can decompose my natural literary imagination), maybe I will lose Many appreciate the sincere diaries, letters and narrations in the interrogation book that come slowly like caterpillars and then cling to the ears in the movie. Robert Frobisher's letter to Hickssmith reminds us of the emotion we felt when we were naive when we copied Cape VII.
You once told me that you liked the long monologue in Sun Shaohong's version of "Red Mansion". This is one of the few things we have in common. I think the movie is violent in the pictures, and there is a considerable amount of narration, so that the pictures and the language can be reconciled. I like the magnetic bass, the gesture of playing with the words like a huff of eye circles. What's more, Frobisher, played by Ben Whishaw in the film, has that absurd confidence, unruly figure, and agile talent, how much like him (you won't ask me which of his, will you?) The acting is very good. Several characters are played by the same person and completely unrecognizable.
One of my favorite lines from the letter is "The boundaries between noise and sound are routines. All boundaries are routines, waiting to be transcended. One can transcend any routine as long as one can think of doing so in the first place." The words and the tenet of this film are the father-son relationship. Sartre believes that existence is a kind of being-for-itself rather than being-in-itself, because of its for-itself, there is selectivity and creativity, so life is free. Our lives are not used to conform to norms, but to maintain freedom and exist outside the norms. I remember once when I mentioned that the pictures you chose were newsworthy, and praised you for your keen perspective, you casually said that you didn’t know whether it was a good thing or a bad thing to be praised by me. I said why, and you replied because I was always unusual. I neutralized the word "unusual" at the time, and after we separated, I replayed this phrase over and over again to give me some hints. My conclusion is that you are a coward and you are afraid to step outside the norm. Unusual is a derogatory word with the same bloody hook in your dictionary as unsatisfactory, horrific, or even disgusting, downright derogatory, and my ever-bright, sharp mind couldn't even smell it.
I also don't remember every word of yours. On the contrary, I almost forgot all of them, but I didn't have a long silence on the phone between the two sides of the last call, but the feeling is still fresh in my memory. If you don't speak, there is nothing to say, and I don't speak because there is too much to say. This scene is as if I was in the supermarket and turned 360 degrees with the basket of vegetables. After a few minutes, I found that my feet were still in the same place, and my eyes had already seen the whole world. Then we spoke at the same time, and I forgot all the next words, but what I remember is the silence that lasted like a lifetime for two minutes.
By the way, I don’t know if you will like Jim Struges as the owner of the Pacific Diary, Adam who is kind and a little cowardly (perhaps like genius and idiot hanging on the line, is kindness and cowardice indistinguishable?) and In order to protect the lieutenant colonel who charged into the battle and fell in love with the clone, Pei Doona, his role in this part completely faded from the cowardly little manhood and turned into a fearless hero, which is shocking.
I can't reminisce about this movie anymore, or I'm going to lose sleep again. I'm going to sleep. Good night.
your water
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