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Polly 2022-09-03 13:56:57
2017.9.15 tiff. Will HE lose face in the literary film industry? ? ? The faces of the female protagonists are really in line with my aesthetic, and the two are cold and windy. Five-star appearance, one-star deduction for the ending. |2019.1.2 Second brush, I have a heart attack again TT
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Ruby 2022-09-03 13:26:33
Is this a propaganda film about Jewish customs? Why do I think the plot is so unreasonable? Why is it so uncomfortable to see two such beautiful people in bed?...
Disobedience Comments
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Michaela 2022-09-21 08:21:51
free will
This movie is really great! I feel very pure what it wants to say, what is free will! The conflict points chosen by the film are also very direct, religious beliefs and homosexuality, especially the same-sex emotions of disadvantaged groups. Personally, I do not think that China has no religious...
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Alysha 2022-09-09 14:37:40
It's all about obedience and disobedience
While the cover of the film features a kissing photo of the pair of Rachels, the film expresses a broader disobedience. The three protagonists Ronit, Esti and Dovid in the movie are all obedient, awakened and resisted. As Rachel Weisz said in an interview: It's all about obedience and....
T
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[first lines]
Rav Krushka: In the beginning, Hashem made three types of creatures, the angels, the beasts, and the human beings. The angels, He made from His pure word. The angels have no will to do evil. They cannot deviate for one moment from His purpose. The beasts have only their instincts to guide them. They, too, follow the commands of their maker. The Torah states that Hashem spent almost six whole days of creation fashioning these creatures. Then, just before sunset, He took a small quantity of earth and from it He fashioned man and woman. An afterthought? Or His crowning achievement? So, what is this thing? Man? Woman? It is a being with the power to disobey. Alone among all the creatures we have free will. We hang suspended between the clarity of the angels and the desires of the beasts. Hashem gave us choice, which is both a privilege and a burden. We must then choose the tangled life we live.
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Esti Kuperman: Oh, Ronit...
Ronit Krushka: Esti... When I saw you, I...
Esti Kuperman: Yes, me too.