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Lourdes 2022-03-10 08:01:27
Although the little old man has always been filming extramarital affairs, this story is too cliché, and the image of a collapsed woman created by Fei Wen has not surpassed that of "Blue Jasmine". The most successful is probably the colorful picture, the rest are clouds, especially...
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Maria 2022-03-10 08:01:27
Where is my turn to accept my fate, it is fate that claimed me when I was the most broken and withered. Love, drama, and poetry are all aspirin for life, and eating seven tablets a day can't stop the Ferris wheel from returning to the...
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Enid 2022-03-10 08:01:27
Carnival-like desolation. The line between comedy and tragedy in the director's works has become increasingly blurred, changing from a passionate expressor to a silent person waiting for an opportunistic peep, observing everything from a perspective mixed with contempt, ridicule, sympathy and admiration. He fills the characters with heavy past events, and then breaks them down with a straw. Failure is for all, and no one is spared. The director is in his 80s, and he begs Hollywood to let him go...
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Pedro 2022-03-10 08:01:27
Staged shots and performances. The story is old-fashioned, completely retro from content to style. Winslet is perfect and Justin is a vase. Coney Island Edition Madame Bovary, Anna Karenina. The same theme is repeated in different forms, be it a cliché or a...
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Peggie 2022-03-10 08:01:27
Coney Island Takes a...
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Lee 2022-03-10 08:01:27
NYFF55 Sneak Peek. My goddess Wen and the old man were both present. The closing scene was worth it! The old man knocked on the blackboard and taught us to interpret photography with Eugene O'Neill's ideas. The wonderful high-saturation and vivid picture The Wonder Wheel at the opening is a close-up of the transformation of light and shadow. The half-face is different from the past, which effectively increases the tension and potential conflict of the scene. The plot is still as exaggerated as...
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Seamus 2022-03-10 08:01:27
It is a very serious drama, and it is a continuation of the "karma" series of stories that old Woody has been addicted to since the 1980s. A woman who is dissatisfied with life expects love to save herself from the quagmire, but Woody Allen does not believe this illusory expectation: under the neon lights of Coney Island, "love" is greasy and illusory, and it is ridiculously powerless. People are all fetching water from bamboo baskets. Woody Allen's movies have so much to...
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Adrienne 2022-03-10 08:01:27
You think that the midsummer when the ears are rubbing together is love, and the garden with rippling love words will like it. You think that a man is a god who saves hopeless love, and that emotion is a love that ripples and stirs fate. The slap in the face of life still can't wake up a woman, and a man can have an epiphany just by watching friends. Thought to climb to the top of the Ferris wheel, it is actually a merry-go-round that cannot be caught. Put on the most beautiful white dress, but...
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Richie 2022-03-10 08:01:27
The old-fashioned plot, just want to say: whether a woman is 20 years old or 40 years old, she is always counting on love to rescue her sinking life. In love, they're shrewd and stupid, shrewd enough to be stupid, and especially stupid when they're showy—but I'm getting really sick of this...
Wonder Wheel Comments
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Sam 2022-04-21 09:03:43
American Story
There are serious plot leaks below, please choose to read carefully!
I like watching movies. Through movies, you can see a world you have never seen before, and experience a life that you cannot experience. I think this is what movies bring us. As for whether movies can become an art like painting,... -
Daniela 2022-03-21 09:03:24
The world of adults is only fate
The last scene was very well shot. Kate Winslet calmly said that she hadn't cooked for the children yet, and her clothes as a waiter had not been washed. Her husband asked her if she wanted to go fishing, and she replied, as usual, that she didn't. Go, she doesn't like fishing, everything seems to...
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Mickey: Jesus, what a sheltered life I've led. I have book knowledge but you've really tasted life.
Carolina: You've been round the world.
Mickey: Yeah, but you've been around the block. You think you'll always be looking over your shoulder?
Carolina: Everybody dies, you can't walk around thinking about it.
Mickey: You're talking to a lifeguard.
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Ginny: Oh, God. Don't tell me you got me a present.
Carolina: How often do you turn 40? It's a milestone!
Ginny: It's a tombstone!