Quills Comments

  • Dee 2021-12-22 08:01:38

    In many periods in history, especially in the West, the yearning for freedom and sex are linked together. Freud’s logic is linked to sex in everything, especially artists. I used to think he was nonsense. Now think about it. ...Probably...

  • Micaela 2021-12-22 08:01:38

    In fact, it has nothing to do with eroticism. The whole film seems to be a passionate (like the fire scene), and the desire to create and write is splendidly wonderful. And the content of the book needless to say, just as attractive as Kate’s Snow Muscle back then... the final ending is a bit too dramatic, but it’s really beautiful. Jeffrey Rush does have his own set of acting as a lunatic, and he has appeared again after "Shiny...

Extended Reading
  • Vern 2022-04-21 09:02:37

    quill

    Human nature needs affirmation and release, and the pursuit of truth needs to be satisfied. When it is suppressed for too long, it will burst out, forming a deformed resistance and release. Extreme circumstances lead to extreme demands, which have nothing to do with morality and should not be put...

  • Holden 2022-04-19 09:02:16

    Renaissance~



        The film is undoubtedly ambitious, giving me         a sense of renaissance. The director seems to be saying: "You have to know your own instincts before you can be yourself." The person between the restraint and reason that human beings should be, is the maid played by Winslet. She is...

Quills quotes

  • Marquis de Sade: [voiceover, as Coulmier writes] Beloved reader, I leave you now with a tale penned by the Abbe du Coulmier, a man who found freedom, in the most unlikeliest of places: at the bottom of an inkwell, on the tip of a quill. However, be forewarned, it's plot is blood-soaked, it's characters depraved, and it's themes... unwholesome at best. But in order to know virtue, we must acquaint ourselves with vice. Only then can we know the full measure of man. So come... I Dare you... Turn the page...

  • Coulmier: There are certain things... feelings... we must not voice.

    Madeleine: Why?

    Coulmier: They incite us to act on what we should not... cannot.